The News and
y
I
VOL. 8*
A dvertiginit Mediof of Southern Alberto*! Sugar
ItATMONS, ALBERTA. TUDAT. SEPT 86. 1886
District
NO. 30
PaintYour
Beet Rack
We can supply youi* requirements
at small cost. Increase the life
of your beet rack and add to its
usefulness with a little paint,
THE BIO DEPARTMENT STORE
Raymond Merc.
COMPANY. LIMITED
On the New Chevrolet^-'Features You
Would Expect to Find Only on
Higher Priced-Cars
Long semi-cliptic springs, dry plate disc clutch re¬
quiring no lubrication, extra strong rear axle with
banjo type housing, beautiful Fisher bodies on closed
models, all models finished in beautiful colors of Duco.
one-piece VV type wind shield on closed models.
CHEVROLET DEALERS
Knight and Meldrum
nu'»*iinK'
w« n* r* UUe«U*il Ihe iriosJ
HARVESTING THE VETERANS’ NAMES
BEET CROP WANTED
Th e beet harvoEt is underw ay The Women’s Institute is snxi-
nnU it is highly important for all ous of obtaining a complete lint of
(M>ncornpd that the harvesting of those Raymond men who served in .
the first crop be aooompliahed in a military or naval tinita during the
manner satisfactory to alL Great War. If any oue knows of
The securing of an adequate any man who served, and whose
supply of lalior is all important if name does not appear in the list
the crop is to lie harvested withia below, they will confer a favor by
(he si>ccified time, i. e. by Koveinl^ phoning such name to the Record-
l>er 1st. Ill oixler to facilitmte the phone 24.
placing of labor it is urged that Paul H. Redd, Lyman Redd,
each and every grower wantitig Reno Vance, Douglaa Paxnian,
help should notify the field m' ; of Wilford Meldrum, Allan Erickson,
the Company or t he writer at least Jack Ralph, Chas. Brown, Drexel
four (lays prior to requiring the Sehnan, Lee Selman, Leslie SUv-
sanio. When labor is supplied ensou, Frank Stevens, Karl Stev-
lionsing accomodation etc sh^iiid ens, Douglaa Fowler, Wilford Har-
bo in readiness in order that dissat* rie, David Fulmer, Raymond
Ufact ion and loss of time may be Knight, jr., Newel Milner, Dun-
avoided. Where growers have en- oan Weaver, Clarence Elder, lagc-
guged their help privately it is de- more Johnson, Ottis Court, Lee
sirable that they notify the field- Brawerton, W^illiam Rouse, Clar-
meu of the Sugar Company in ence Betts, Earl Betta, J. S. Wi*ay,
order that the actual labor fa- Albert Miohell, Herbert Baker.
quiroinent of the district be lmo»n. James Baker, Chas. Fantley, Wil-
It is desirable that the growers liam Gilbert, A. MoPharland, Thoe
get their harvesting oi»erations un- Qoiild, Robert Hayfts, Ijsslie Par-
<lerwny as soon as |K)Ssible and so sons, Walter Berryessa, George
plan their work as to give the beet Gilbert, James Gilbert, G. H.
labor a profitable season's work. Lightfoot, J. W. Wright, James
I It is much easier to induce labor Howard, William Howard, Ernest
to come into the beet fields if a sat- Organ, Edward Daviea, JohnMe-
isfactory aiiiount of labor is assur- hew, jr., Fred Ralph, sr., Jack
ed tliein. It is considered advis- McDonald, Arthur Fautley, P.
able that all growers adhere to the Smith, W. O. Crowe,_ Sidney
contnujt prices when engaging Reeve, Reed Card, Louis Thomp-
their !ab>r. Copies of redrafted son, 'William Aerhart, William
contract fui**ns are available at the Witbock, David Card, Lorin Neel,
Sugar Compa iy’s office and it is Harry Clarke, Herbert RowKng,
ho])ed each grow sr will familiarize Ernest Wilcoxaan. Edward Baker,
blmsclf with the same. , % QeAr 0 /» A. Grawford. J. Foster. J.
•^Vi;rT;::^raTio; on of J.
in this ne^. Penn. Walter Pett.lor._ Cynl All-
Rex Theatre
TONIGHT, FRIDAY
_Free Diamond Ring
Also C^cil B. DcMille’s
GOLDEN BED
And INTO THE ?fBT, written by Police Com¬
missioner of New York. Richard Enright
Admission 25r and 45c
MATINEE SATURDAY, TOMORROW
THREE COMPLETE CHANGES NEXT WEEK
FRIDAY NEXT
The Warrens of Virginia
A Story of the Civil War
Coming SoonPETER PAN
Showing at Rogiilar Prices—15c and 30c
New arrivals in all lines for fall wear are arriving
weekly by express and freight
Just received a new and complete
line of Ladies’ Hosiery
Also a shipment of Shoes for Men and Children
Vour Int erest is Our Interest. PHQg|^.
The Broadway Store
Nov.' is the time to procure your requirements .n
Underwear for Winter
Cold weather is sure to come.
We are showing a good line in the celebrated ‘
STAMFIELD'S and WATSON BRANDS
We also have a complete Imc in a heavy fleece for men
and boys—all sizes. The prices are right.
Bennett & Co. Ltd.
THE PEOPLE S STORE
culty ill hars-osting the
in a satisfactory manner.
O. 8. Longman.
News Notes
Kamiel Hammerlink, August
t .ndsame, Alfons Deharnelle.
srnard BtaeJeus, Gustaf Williams
,r., Robert Allan. H. 8. Gordian.
Bert Love. Elmer Corless.
Chas. Strong received the con¬
tract for brick work ami Thos.
Uolicrts for the wockI work, on the
new postoffice building now under
const ruction. f
News Notes
Free to Men
for one week ONLY
Full 25c size Prlinolive After Shaving
Talc FREE with a 35c Tulie ot
Palmolive Shaving Cream
Kfaymond Pharmacy
^ p. w. cope
Use Want Ads--They Pay Big
-w under The «,hool fair
.oiXiction. / magnificent .uccoss. A h.t o
' prize Winners IB not avauaoie a i
The Cardatou News, which hw goto press. 11
had somewhat tough sledding in fft,„;Har sight 11
Ark houHing and machinery, has Uow days. C. B. lolestr i i
installed new o<i«ipnient. including |L crew ^^.t-eral 1
a $3000 liuotyiH.. moved to bnck complete the cont^t _ II
.luarters in the Silencer Block, hundi-ed racks. Beet bar I
ami blossomed forth with a six- pow due to commence. I
page, all-homo-print New High School reports were I
uo. WW.I i. lU0.rd.r
managing director of the p.rents will’find them I
fun.. Allhougli ho is not an request (or
IMM'ienced ncwKpai>ei’ man. is .j oonoerning theirchild-1
known, and ho is credited ^ j answer^ these reports 1
posBossing the brains and help to instructors
L make the News an honor ^ ^ * u ,
Mon. A sheet like the first at the local high school.
iHsne. and a staff of four men w.U
mean that no small amount of com Notu* « heij^y B
is onpended in its publication, an r below, underslopo
calls for unflagging support on the at Ray-
liart of advertisers and subscribers ,„ill be sold on
: The first issue of the News is the mond Sept. 18tb w
Uiiul of sheet the Temple City « Pound. Chas.
" sX;. p-Uep«_^
mirror of tue town.
If you wish to receive early delivery of
your new Improved Ford Car you must
Place Y our
Order NOW!
The demand for the New Improved Ford is so grwt
that agencies are allotted but a limited number. To
facilitate our arrangements please order at once. We
are expecting a carload early in October. Let us have
your order today so that vre in tur can place further
1 orders for the type of car you prefer. Old prices prevail
KING MOTORS
L. D. KINO
Use Your Printer
If you are in business.
you need his services
Phone 24y The Recorder
ThaeUTailoring Go.-"“SSr
‘ .i„, . ,..l ..... «l latest fabrics STYLES B, SUmN® ..B .
Fll and WortaMBhlp GMr..le«l or Your 'Mooe, Retoded
B U Y 1 N
ranger
FROM
9
MINARD'S
TIIK JnrOKDKI
Lttest Triumph Of
People who use '*Red Rose** are usually
those who like tea of extra good quality
British Optical hdoctry
SEPTIf:MDE:R 20
Make Better Leniee Than Any Other
Country In World
A Tinomatogrnph maclilno which will
take 4,800 ptlrurce n anrond la ohn of
the Intrat triumphs of llrltinh makers
of optical Inatrunients. It can be
uMcd to show, for examplo, the rffcct
of the Impact of projectiles on armor¬
ed plate.
This U only one of the many re¬
markable results achieved slnco the
war which liaVo placed llio Hrltlsh
optical industry far aln'sd of foreign
rivals. Ileforo Iho war, lenses
ground In Germany were believed to
be the best; now. HrltUh lennos are
being bought by the German Oovern-
nient for G 'rir.nn sVntc institutions.
PAUL WRITES TO THE THES
8ALONIANS
Golden Text: In everything give
thanki. I. Thctsalonlana 6.18.
I^BSon: I. Thessatonlana 1 to 5.
Devotional Heading: II. TheasaloR-
tani 2.13-17.
For Abbot Three Years.
Healed by Coticora:
Shoe Polish
The Text Explalnod end Illumined
Paul's motives were genuine, verses
1, 2.—"You yourselves, brothers, know
that our mission to you was a suc¬
cess/* Paul w*rltoa the Thessalonlans.
"Although at Philippi we had suffered
greatly and had been Insulted (recall
the scourging and Imprisonment there,
lesson IX.), yet on we came to our
city and boldly declared to you the
gospel of Q)d In Spite of great oppo¬
sition." Recall the w'ords of Jesus In
Mt. 10.23. "Wo waxed bold In our
God," thus Paul asserts that the
strength to persevere In spite of suf¬
fering was divinely given. And his
argument ho4*o Is that had hiS motives
not been the best, ho would not have
persevered In hts work under such
untoward circumstances. "You never
understand Paul aright," as Professor
The ORANGE PEKOE is
ion
omi
The outstanding event of the week In which this artlele Is written was '
the dissolution of rarliament and the calling of a general eltcilon to take,
place next mtSnth to choose a new House of ('otnmons. Thl.«; is a innlt<T In
which cv«*ry cKir.cn of ('anadu is vitally IntcreKled regardless of individual
party views and ainilations or posltlt>n occupied In the economic life of the
Dominion.
The fortunes «»f polltlral parlies are not liie concern of thi.s particular
column; what we are concerned about are the r<»rlunea of the Oominion of ^
i'anada, and, in particular, of Western t'anada becau-^e of a profound cofulc-
linn that It will only be through the sctt)eiU'‘nt. the development, the pros¬
perity of this vast western land that permanent growth and prosperity will
come to the Dominion as a whole. Support given, oi opposition ><*lced. In
this cidumn to any given polic> in the past, or that may be given or voiced
In thi‘ future, is not because such ptdlcy may originate with any pHrtlcUlur
p(dl leal party, hut be< ause of Its bearing on t'anada's progre.s.’ and prttpperlly.
In tile (Huuing ♦•lectitui. as in all elections, many consch'ntlous voters will
find ihetnsi'Ucs in somewhat of a tpiandary Jn.st how to mark Ihelr balhd jmp«T.
They not onl> will h»‘ t ailed upon to choose from-among the candidates offer¬
ing tor election the iimn or woman to be their repreesntutlve at Ottawa, but.
while making that cludce, they must also render a verdict on the larger nation¬
al issue of the pollcloH and group of men the\ tleslre to rule at (.>ltuwa.
llecaii-ie t)f this dt»ttble re<(pon.''ihilit>. many vott'rs find themselves In dlf-
ficulil**s. It It was merely a ca.s** t»r .selecting titeir local i*epn*senlatl. e, the
task would be comparatively simple, namely, voting for the candldat<‘ who In
tlelr Jmlgment was the most upright, the ablest, best Informed and most in-
tell|g*'nt. and theif‘fore llk«*ly to prove the mopi capable represntative. Itut,
It not intrecpieiitly happens that this particular ramlldate is standing in sup¬
port ot policies and headers which the individual voter id not prepurul to buii-
)M;rt. while a less caiMhle man is the candidate supporting pulU-li‘8 and leaders
In whl -h he h:r- confidence. The jiroblem is tlu*r»'. but In llic final analysis
ii must be <Ierl»|ejl bv the voter.
One thing the individual voter can do, and that is to tHe all Ills influence
to .^eoure the .-eleril»>n of a canditiute in whom he lias every confidence us a
local repieseiitatlve by the party whose poIicb>s he supports and in whose
lead*'!-^ he has confiileiire. Such action on hi.- part is one of the duties of
citizenship which tli«- iiidividuul vol<‘r owa-s to his ciUintr.v.
Another (‘ourse of action on the part of the individual voter is to refrain
pledging hi- suftporl t<» anv one candidate until ail tiie c.indidate.s are in tlie
field, ami the oppo-ing polici,-« the contemling. parties are clearly oiitUned
and understood. Nobud> slioilld {dedge sucli a valuable thing as liodr vote
• in the dark ” and willioui lull knowledge of all the iacis which have .t bearing
1(1 the electiou.
Ill the approaching election there i> another and gr.ive cnn.''id<‘ratlon which
nm-^l Iniluence the in the nmrklng of hl» hallol. Since t’onfedu'athm.
with the exc-e]itlon of the last four 'ears, the parly in power at Oilava, wlieihei*
J.lberal. t'onsi'ivatlv.• ui I'uionDi, has al ways comiuun dedi^^suW-\pt^i*
•• ' I"" pnThdmTT^^nTTcrerpmisibillty rc'stcd
s(|tMreli on lt> shoulder.'.
Dii’Ing t!n> past four 'ears the (;overnment of tlie day di»l-nnl possesa nurh
jt majoilt'. The House of t’cuiinions was divided into three dUlinct groups,
l ach with policies of their own. The mitstumling feulur • rft t’ondeivativo
policy vva.s vvhollj unacceptable to the ITngre.s^'ive group and to the vast ma¬
jority ol the Government following; the piiiui|de.s and pilmury features of
iTogresslve policy Wen* eouallv iinaccenlshlf to ih,. r,in vt t I ,'<>.1 .ind < #> n
Swollen Joints,
Quickly Limbered Up
Rub (jn Nerviline
Scared the Passengers
A Hamp.strad tube train was leav¬
ing Pclsize Park Station, T.ondon.
when there was a loud bang. .‘■t»;vt“ral
w-onion scrcainod, the conductor l6ok-
ed uneasy, ono hou-:ew if«> with a hand¬
ful of parcoli Jumped up and made for
the door.
A child Robbed - and looked re
proachfully at her right hand, which
held a pleco of string und the frag-
immts of a *uy balloon.
You would be surprised at the* won¬
derful action of "Nerviline" In Just
such rases. llelng thin and not an
oil prcparullon. It Is able to penedrato
quickly, and tlown It sinks Into Iho tls-
hut s, carrying its h* aling, poollitng ac¬
tion when vgi- it goes. Kor stopping
nm.sculnr or nerve pain, for rasing a
stiff Joint, NervUlno la a complete suc¬
cess. Pain, sorenc'ss, Rtlffnos.s all
vanish betore the magic power of this
wonderful liniment. Nearly fifty
years of success proves tho merit of
Nerviline, which Is sold everywhere In
large 35 cent bottles.
Prc« R»c1m
Writ* th* Bord** Co,
Llmltsd, Montreal.
ONTARIO gOLLEGE OF ART’
Grange Park • Tcrona*
DRAWINO-PAtMUNO-MODELUNC-DCSlCN
DIPiOMA COURSE • JUNIOR OOURSC.
TTACHER^S COURSE • O^MERClAL ART
G-A-REID R-C A* Prinapal
ftMaten tgcS-tt Op*n% 0*t*k*r Blh
fW "Fftprehu .-tpply T* ‘Rt«Mr«r
Like a Grip at the Throat. For a
diaeaso that Is not classed ns fatal
thoro Is probably none which causes
tnoro torriflle suffering than asthma.
Sleep is lmpo.*c8ible, the sufToror be-
('onien eAh.iusted and finally, though
tho attack passca, is loft In unceas¬
ing dread of its return. Dr. J. D.
Kellogg's v\sihnia Remedy Is a won¬
derful remedial agent. It Immediate¬
ly ndieves the realrlcted air passages
as thousands can testify. It Is sold
by dealers eve rywhere.
Paper M^de From African Grass
Paper made from cKparto, an Afri¬
can wild grass, has b«'t>n produced by
tlie burenn of stundard.s on a commer¬
cial basis and .-samples have been made
ttvuilabiu to American industry ns a
government le.st. The bureau’s re¬
ports show that Die Iniyorted grass
pulp, after cleaning gave a tN per cent.
> leld of pnperniaking fibre.
Insects Bring Safety
All steel railway cars are now being
used on Indian railways. The change
was not made for safety reasons but
because Insects ate up the wooden
cars rapidly.
Building A Disposition
Spirit of Consideration Hat to be
Cultivated Early
“Well, I do hope that when I reach
the age where I have to be taken care
of, I shall be willing to lot other peo¬
ple have their way Instead of Insist¬
ing upon my own and making it hard
for everybody olse,*^ said a clear, de¬
rided voice as the three women parl-
c(K at the street corner. They had
been discussing the troubles of an
DON’T WAIT f
Ancient Indian Curio Sent to Nev^
York From Saskatchewan
Swathed in its original wrappings,
Romo of the inner inatei lal i being hun¬
dreds of years old, ono of tho oldest
relics on tho Am*‘rlcun continent Is
now on its way to New York to its long
rest in tho rnu8» vSm of American lleye
Koundailon, ri,ft lustitiuloa devoted ex-
- D. A. t'adxow', curator of tlie mus¬
eum, vas In Uoglna r<*conlly •after
n^'re than a month spent in tho varl-
Dtti reserves in Saskaleliewun. lie
set.ired a muss of old knives, arrows,
blankets, beads and other trinkets, but
the prize he was after and secured was
possibly the last of the peace pipes
M tained by tho Drees.
A Condition That Calls For a
Reliable Tonic
•Many women give so much of their
time to the rules of their linusehoid
that they neglect their own health
ami soim times reach iho verge of a
l)r<>Hkdow'n before they realize that
their health i.s shaltt*red. Often tho
heart iialpltal^ violently at slight
exertion, th » Womarh falls to tligest
4**4rt r..'trr*-xrfwvf irtiV''mva.rai'^'hv
grow more frequent. The hoi|> growls
Weak and they are always depres.sed
1 his conili'ion requires immediate
treatment with such a reliable tonic
as Dr. Williams’ Pink, Pills w hich en¬
rich and build up tin* blood, carrying
n*!u*wed enTgy to i very part of* the
body. Tlie value of Dr. Williams*
Pink Pills In a rundown coreR4ion is
proved by iha following statement
iroiu Mrs. A’«-x. Mclnmts, Dowsinun
Ulver. Man., wlio says: ‘ .\bout a
>ear ago I had a sim Ious IIIih'sh which
left me very atmeinlc. I was nm .able
to gel around ih do niv woik: In fur!
'till vou got sick.
Use Mlnard’t — the great
prez?ntatlv®.
parted, the two looked at each other
with a significant smile. This friend
of theirs was one who had great faith
In her owiTwisdom.
"1 am afraid that virtue does not
develop suddenly," remarked the one.
T suspect Inat the person who Is to
be gentle and unselfishly considerate
in old age has to begin to cultivate
that spirit much further back.”
That is the story of so many of our
failures to atlAln our ideals: We do
not begin to practice their graces
early enough. The strong self-con¬
trolled, useful manhood or womanhood
does not grow naturally from a care¬
less, self-indulged youth, and tho
beautiful old age that Is a benediction
is not likely to spring from the hasty,
domineering spirit that has been al¬
lowed to rule iniddlo life Character
is a garden whoso gracious flowering
calls for curly planting.
It has be^D decided by the Berlin
courts that when an opera is- broad¬
cast the singers are entitled to demand
a ten per <lcnt. incroaso gf salary.
i na.s Uriiifii at u tim*- wh»*n diTi.-ivt' action waa urger.t-
>' r**cogniz»*s tlu- situailon. The ()ppo^ilion make it a
»v. rnmeiu: the Government admits Hie slluation has
blaim h'ss in view’ of the condition.*- w hich coufronled ll.
•r.Ml iroiu exactly the same situation until an election
I'hen the people put ail end to an inipo.sKihU* situation
• with an overwhelming majority and a clear mandate
4t rnit«M Sjatea election tin- voters w . re faced v. iili a
'lo-y, too, decided in tlic int»*r»*sts of good govcrniiiont
HI* and substantial w’orking uiajoiiiy.
H month the voters of Canada inu.*<t lace this Issue and
I of the outcome of the voting. It is impoitaiu that de-
or the iiiher be tuk«‘n. and an end put to pieseru inde-
«ling to wuise than stagnation in tin* develojmieiu and
policies and n*rorms calculated to promote the imtlonul
Worms lo children work havoc.
These posts attack the tender lining
of the IntesHnos and. If left to pursue
their ruvag'^s undisturbed, will ulti¬
mately perforate tho w’all, because
these worms are of the hook variety
that cling to and feed upon tho interior
surfaces. Miller’s Worm Powders
will not only exterminate these worms,
of whatever variety, but will serve to
repair tho injury they have done.
Riffians Are Good Fighters
Perliajns Hn> most elaboralo, and
tln-r*'for»* tin* most perplexing, nation¬
al flag is tint! of Tibet, hccaus**, apart
Irom the main de.-;ign, which is curi-
on.«.l' coniph'X. the spares In It are
filieil up with alteinate Iriahgles of
rid and blue.
According to Sir Ian Malcolm
vvlien the laio Lord Ciirzon was Vice¬
roy of India, a street banner of wel¬
come bore the words, "God IMoas Out
Horrable Lout." 'J’lils uppur<‘utl>
was tho nearest the natives could gel
to "Honorable Lord."
Are Holding Their Own Against'
France and Spain ^
Tho Rilllau tribesmen in Morocco
will he able* lo maintain their Indo-'
peiidcnco against Hio French and i
Spaniards for some time. In tho opln-1
ion of Sir ('iiHi los Hoblioitse, former i
llriilsh army olllcer, nnd ex-postmaa-;
It^r-general, wlm has n-luriied to Lon-1
don froirt inspecting lIio condition of'
Hio itiillan refugees at Tangier, on bo-
lialf of tlio League of Nations.
"Dosplto grandiose stories, the lUf-
fian.H arc holding their own against
France and Spain," Up told tho news¬
papermen. "it will undoubtedly bo a
case of Kuropo against Africa, If the
war Is carried on, and it looks as if
Africa will hold her own, and a little
more.
• Tlio Ulffs are great figliters. They
havo up-lo-dale equlpnient. and their
leader, Abd-el-Krlin, is a man of re¬
markable milliary
A WON DER-
FUL, rt^.tural
water softener —
leaves the hands
soft and white. Re¬
fuses to scratch.
A deer which I.*< a confirmed itibacco
(liewer Iri a curlohJiy of the ZOO in
Racine, Wis.
French Machine Carries Heaviest
Armament Ever Used
The French in Morocco are using a
now type of fighting plane carrying
tho heaviest armament over used. It
is made of metal with bullet-proof
tank. Besides inachlno guns tho
planes carry special quick-firing guns
of a calibre of ono and a half inches.
Each plane is manned by a crew of
five men.
The new planes belong to the naval
air service. Possessing a largo radius
of action, they ara considered the most
powerful machines of the ulr today.
Among other new weapons tho
French are experimenting with Is an
appliance enabling bombers to throw
hand grenades 150 yards.
The general average of education
for women In India is less than 3 per
Cent.
WESTERN CLEANEERE LIMITED
CALOARV, CANADA
Uanufactured By
WKSTCRN CLtANKIIS.
Sales AgenU, W. R. Beatty
Vancouver. B.C.
capacity
Ottawa, in Canada; Sydney, Mol-
bourno and Perth, In Aiislralla; and
Pretoria In South Aliloa, all havo the
right to mint Jheir own gold coins.
Mr* K. Mt, Collins of Woodbaveo*
N. Y., says, "Instead ol plodding
through my work wearily on account
of sick headaches and sour stornscb,
I now enjoy good health and ambition,
can do more and better work and life
is worth living. I have never before
given roy name to advertise a medicine,
hut you cannot imagine how different
I feet since 1 discovered Carter’s Little
Liver Pills."
Carter’s Little Liver Pills tonic the
whole system through the liver and
bowels. T'hey act as a mild and effec¬
tive laxative, In a gentle manner with¬
out any bad after effects.
Ke4'()mmendcd and for sale by a||
drug stores.
MOTHER
Fletcher's V V L /
Castoria is especially pre- i
pared to relieve Infants in / / /
amis and Children all ages of ^
Constipation, Flatulency, Wind
Colic and Diarrhea; allaying ^
Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach
and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Footf; giving natural sleep.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates
Corns aru painful growths
way's Corn Remover will
them.
llolio-
removu
The bones and muscles of tho" hu¬
man body are capable of more than
L'iOO different motions.
Destruction or livestock by wolves
during the lust year in Russia eutuil-
ed a loss of 4.000,000 gold rubles.
THERAPI
THERAPI
Keep Mlnard’s Liniment in the house
■t. 1 fDr lladdEr C«urrli. Vo. I fer BlDDi^
BklaDtsEaME. HD.IterChraDleVraaEMSssM*
Ml MB I E«IM*«''(:i<»u Er^.E•'l(:l'IM ENC.I ANO.Sik
ET MeM si 1 O trixB n. Short ST. i.,TOEOM IWSdV
«BlS. MaSEMAM Sr ASET NSW VDBSCm.
Physicians everywhere rccuimneod it
Ask for Minarff's and take no othor
TTTE 1 ?E(' 0 RDKU
Premier King Prepares
To Make Tour Of The
Western- Provinces
Speech At Geneva On
Disarmament Question
Received With Ovations
Veteran Newspaper Man Passes
OUawa.—Aa aoon aa l*n*niirr Klnf?
conctyd4>n 1 i1h tour of tho Maritime
Provincoa, ho will ro woat. Although
the itinerary Ih not yet arranged, he
plana to apeak at the principal rltlea
of the prairie provinces, and go on to
Drltlah Columbia, accompanied by a
numiM'r of paity atalwarta.
In the eaat the campaign shows
signs of warm^g up, both as regards
the activltiy of party organization
and the character of the platform
utterances. For so early a stage,
heat Irt developing rapidly, noth part¬
ies agree pretty well that the pivotal
point win be lural Ontario. Here th<»
situation differs from 1921, owing to
the relatively small figure the Progres¬
sive party is cutting. It is belliw'ed
that the gre.it proportion of the votes
cast In 1921 in this province for the
third party will this time go to the
liberals. Several former Progres¬
sive memb ra will give the lead by
running under the Liberal colors. The
Conservativ's will make a big bid
for the vote of the Industrial centres,
on the high protectionist issue, but
most of those ridings they hold al¬
ready.
n* VII M# rlarlng that niiiil iIIk-
a]'i))Hini-nt is aelil*''. •■«!, aJ) pra<'i’ ••fforis
of tin- L< agu>‘ of Nation.‘^ will In- fiull-
lesH. Paul Poneoiir of tlio Firm h dob-
gallon, .^(M'lalisl d< puiy and fot int r
ininistir of labor, In ono of tin* most
bi'illlHiii orations lieard hln<«- Iho
lounding of the h-agiie, urg'd that,
lo ginning Ininitdiately, pri panilions
must !»«' made lor n dlHarinaim nt eon-
fereiice whi h hliould be summoned ns
soon as the security negotliUloMK with
CJermaiiy Im i- b*-en brought lo a sue*
cesj-ful coii'-hlhiou.
M. llonconr’s oration whs a defeme
*>i tile (iene\u protrN’ol. S«» vf-mark
aide lias Jii.s effort, and ho luusierly
his dlHseciion of various eoni'rfttt
Hon. J. A. Robb Succoodt Fielding As
Ministtr of Finance
Ottawa.—The cabinet re-organlza-
tlon was ofTlciRlly completed when
Hon. J. A. Hobb was sworn in aa min¬
ister of finance and Hon. Herbeil Mar-
ler, as minister without portfolio. The
two ministers were swern in by K. J.
Ix'malrc, clerk of the privy eounell, In
the presenc'3 of His Kxoellenry Ixjrd
Ilyng at Oovernment Hotist*.
Shuuld the pre.sent government be
returned to power, there is Ilk»*ly to
be further re-.idjustment of the cabi¬
net.
Two mlrisUrs, Hon. Charles Mur¬
phy and Hon. Dr. Ueland are. It Is
undfTst'/oil, retaining ofllce only un¬
til the elections are over and there
will «neii be some readjusting of imrt-
follos.
Mr. Ilobb has bci*n acting minister
of finance for some time, owing to
the illness of the veterau parllamen-
larlan. Kt. Hon. W. 8. Fielding, who
now has been retired, after many years
of service to his country.
the first thn e months of the pnsent
fiscal year, Hial is, from Apill J to
.liine J92.', lolalled ItLMtS. aernrd-
Ing to a reoort Issued by fhi- depart
ment of Itiunigrailon.
Of this tfdiil IC.oni oanx' from Oreai
Hritain, Nortlnin Ireland and the
Irish Fi-e.. Stale, 11,207 from Hie
i:nll(;d .States and n.048 froi.i other
eountrles. almost entirely troni Nor¬
thern Kuropiv
In the same ihre.> months 0.111 Can¬
adians who had been in the rulti-d
.Slates for six months nr longer, and
who went to (hat country to settle, re¬
turned lo th.» Dominion.
Since the depio tment of Jnimigru
Hon and colonization h> gan to keei>
a record of tliese returning CanadianK
on April 1, 102-1, a total f.r haie
come hack iip to the end of lust Jiitn .
>>. li. Haliantyne, editor of the
Journal at Kmerson, Man., died sud-
d»‘nly at his home in Knierson, Man.,
Monday, September 7, from a stroke
of parulysls, Mr. Haliantyne was one
of the veterans of Journalism in Mani¬
toba. He had been publishing the
Journal for over 30 years, and pre¬
vious to (hat tliiif* liad been fon-inan
in the ofilee of the weekly, which has
a long record of service to the dis¬
trict. Last year Mr. Haliantyne, with
Mr.H. Hal)an‘.yne spent Hie summer in
the Old Country, visiting AVembb y
with the \^’oslern Canadian editors.
Mr. Haliantyne was on th** exi'cutive
of the Western Press Association, was
a prominent Freemason, and l.s sur-
^ived by hl.^ Wife, who formerly was
Mrs. (Dr.) Henderson, jdoneer of
Winnipeg and Stonewall. Thi-re are
no children.
Business Was Unprofitable
Qovernmant of Western Australia Will
Not Employ Foreigners
Perth, Austinlta.—The Hovernmehl
of Western Australia, having learned
that foreigners have securtni a large
proportion of the work offered In ron-
tiection with the clearing of land foi
the purpo.se of cultivation, has derid¬
ed that in futur*- any money advanc«‘S
made to sotlltTs by the Agricultural
bank to finance such w’ork shall be
made on the condition that only Hrll-
ish subjects shall be employed.
eu .-Males pronimiion l<uees against
Hum How nud tlie liquor siiiugglers*!-
imving a marked effect on tin* export
liquor traflic of tlie Hrltlsh Isles. Thl.s
trafllc is now going through sueli a
lean period that no mom y is available
any more to finance rum running e\-
pt'diiions, and e.\pnrls of liquor desHii
ed for Hie arid T nlted States hiiv.-
dropped uluio.'-:l r>u pi*r «‘eni. since
January. .
The iHNiin of 192:’. and 1921. when
hundreds ol thousands of pounds of
Mnglisliinen's money was leady to
llnaiiee rum running ;o1m mures, has
died out. So lias ih** iiielinatiun
among some people in Hn at Hriiaiii
lo tamper witli the bhH'kade which the
1'nited Sial.'S tioverniu.-iii has Hirotin
around its > oasts.
W ^nlpeg.—D. C. Macl*aehlan, man¬
ager of the Western Klevalor Com¬
pany, was elected president of the
Winnipeg Grain Kxehange tor the term
of 1925-26, at the annual meeting of
the exchange members. A. Thomp¬
son, manager of the International
Elevator Company, and N. J. IlrtM-n,
western manager of the Uike of iho
Woods Milling Company, were chosen
vice-presidents. I^rr Hubert Magill
was returned as secretary by acclama-
Hon.
Tile exeeiiilve council nf comniHlees
were also s*‘Iected.
Has Denounced Bolsheviks
Return Historic Shield
.MciDourne. i he disturbed rondi
lions in Australia have cati.sed Pr**-
miei Hnice to take a delinic** stamJ
against the Cominuuists.
In a public addres.s heri- Hie jtremiei
lieiioiUM'd the local expound* r of Hol-
shevlsiii. and ns.serted h<* would not
lu'siiat*- lo :*pp«al lo th** p(*op|«- tor
endorseimm oi his ucihm. If ii« l•*•H-
sary, Im> w*mhl H*‘ek a matulai*- foi
fiirth**! ai’lion lo insure piae«* and
good ii^o.* rum* nt.
Wariaiils litive b*** n i.ssimd for four
iiururi'<-d .M'-ibfuii'iic .si-anien mr lue
part in the unofilcial strike again
lln‘ recently announ«<<l wag*- (P
er*'Uh«-.
Escutcheon Taken From Quebec la
Preaented to City After Long
Sojourn In England
b* t. <'oint)d« nt with He- **n«*
hundr* <1 an*! -i\tj - .-l\ih unnivt-r.-^ary
ol 111*' iiatth* *it Hi*. I'liiins id .\bia-
ham. Ibis haiHe and ih«‘ >uhh«-qinnt
* apiiillaiion ol tju* b'-e to the ItilHsii
ir4u»p.s w*-r*- rt \iM-d to tin- woiJil when
the iseuleh -on pr«*.'*iit*-*l to Ih* his
torh* eli> b\ a king ol Flam*-, tak*-ii
1r*uu Hh- Walls ol b> (i<'n*-ral
.Murray all- t' th*- eapiiiilaiion <il th**
Confer On Coal Strike
Ilarrisbuilr. Ha.—Governor Himhoi,
of Pennsylvania. Invited J. L. Lewis,
presldiuil of th*. rnU*-d Min** Workers
of Aim-rlca, and W. W, Inglls, chair¬
man of Hu- unthra**lt<* op**iators’ scale
eumniillee, to m«-* i him separalt-ly at
his home in Milford, to discuss Hm
pres«*iil a nthracite mining susin.nslnn.
liie m<>eiing.4 w« re n-quesi*-*!. the go
ernor d*Tlar'*d. wlHi no lnt*.ntion *
his part to ini* rv* ne in th*- eonlp
\*rsy.
Missing Seaplane Rescued
Anthracite Prices Advance
Predicted Cost Will Further Increase
If Strike Continues
Washington.- -Pom plaints that n-
‘! lallerf. an* !>■-ginning t<rincreits«. pMci
»^«tf anthraeili- *-oaI ur* arising fnnn
“ nuinb*-r of eitifs. Pi't-dieti'ins a
I made that pric*-s will In* still lurth*
(increas*'*! If the strik** eonilmu'.s, at
I that eoiisuim*i'(t hen* and in Cana*
»I will bear tie* btinh-n.
M .Meanliim*. then* an- no signs tli;
t.th** adminis ruHtm plans to inte
■ : vi*n** in Hu* strike, ami the ualkm
lioiMilulu.—t.'aptaiii J*jhn Hodg*-rH
itiinmnd**!’ of th*- inishing s«'aplan*
-Trtrfr.rts . xyi-n:.,r..F
weri? luiind alli*» 15 miles * asl ol
Kauai, by He* Mibinailiie H i. ^
Ihidg* rs ami his * r**w I* ft San Kran-
clsc-*i in an alt* uipt***l non-stop iHghi
lo Honolulu on Augu-l 31. Th«- Pil¬
lowing afte;n*ion. 24 hours aflir his
seaplau*-. ilv: P.\-9 No. J hopp*-*! off,
Ih*- Ilium* and < rew disapix-areil about
300 miles from its d*'KHnaH<in. La>l
m**srag**s lr<ii*i th* P.\-9 N*i. i piat*-<l
Hial its gas«ilin** supjily was about ex-
liausti-d and ti for*-* *1 landing was *\
p*.*et***l.
i*»wn ol lla-'tliigs f*ir saf* k»-'-ping, was
olIhiaII> i<*liiim*d l<i th** *lly «if (Jue-
h*** as a goodwill offi riiig iroiu I-h»g-
land lo I'r**,!* h-t‘aiia*lians.
Hon, P. c, I.arkin, Canadian lilgli
eomml.-.>.ion in London, hand* *1
*iver th** shi- hi lo *jU'-b* c as Ho- olll-
elal n pr«*.- ntatiM of tin- i4*wn oi
llasHngs, Ivigl.ind, afi'*r the un\*‘iling
ei-remony by Hon. N P« idd<au. li' U
l*'n:ini -g*>i ♦ I'mir.
Dease Lake Promise
Was Not Fulfilled
Disappointed fdiners Start Trek Back
Fr^ni Cassiar Field
Tel. graph Cm-k, H.c 'l lo- *.ut trail
fnuii ** 11 ** Ca.sslar Ih b* ing trodd.-n m-
duy by a host of di.-^appoinli-d mim rs
wlnise liopi*s *)f <|uieK >v»-allh in Ih*
plue*-i lielils of iM-as*' Lak** ha\*- b*-**ii
blusii-d by Ho* *-ru»*l r*-ali!> of 111** in
lb** inhuspit'iblt- iiorHilaml.
A few small sUik*‘S hav** b» i ii uiaii*-.
but th*-r** Is lldh- t*) slniw lor all Hi*'
*-\*Ili-iinnt that was Min*-d uji last
wint* r by jh • ann*mne*-mi nt *if th*-
di.se*r.*ry *ir fr*»* gold in tin* amlml
mining **amii vhieh was abundom-tl in
111*- lilt** nil!‘ties with th*- (Iluii oi Hi**
Klond>k«- glory.
Ear..h Is Slowing Down
Washliigt*in. ’riie * urtli i.s shiwlng
down, sa>s a r«*** nt publi**aiioii <»r the
Smiih.sonian InsHtuHon. J!m Hier*- i'
littli- *lang>'r of a e**s.*iuHoii *if its
rotary motion, for Hn- rat** *if .«<lowing
thiwn i.s only (.m- Hiousaiidih ol a s* r-
oml p*'r e*.*nlnr>.
Tlii.s m«*a.iH a loss of
Canada’s Wheat Yield
Estimate Is Placed At
391,816,000 Bushels
:i miiiut*- in
six million >*ars. SeieiiHhts «-sH I
I late that agej ahd ag.-s ago Hn- *-ariii :
revolvi'd s*) faht that a *luy wa.-* ilir****^
or lour lioii s. *
Fruit Houses Amalgamated
WiiinliM-g.- J. A. Siniington.^Iinm*
apoli.s, dlr. elor of Hn- Nu.'^h Fruit Coni'
puny in We8l* rn Canada. liai< ronilrm-
*-d a pr* vious announe* iin-nt that Hn
Nasii eompanit'K had l)<-**ii amalgaiiiai-
* d und«*r tin- uann- of Hn* Nash Sim
ingion Company.
Adv icates Bay Route
Uc'gina That Hi*; Hudson's Hay
Hallway 1^ feasibl** and that an *ai)y
eoiupletlun ■ f Hi** (‘oiistruetion l.s *1**-
sirabh; lu iho opinion *)f C. C. Cook**,
of this eiiy, who has just returned from f
a trip lo th*' buy by rail atnl wal**r.
with a party of west* rn bihsim-ss m**ii.
Much materi-'l ami *'oiihld* rabI.* wai* i ;
pow»*r i.H avuitabn* lor harbor fa* iliti**; ]
at tin* « nd *if tin* liin-. in* slat«*s.
Premier Dunning Recovers
Ui-gimi, .Si‘k. Pr« ini* r 1 tunning has
r« * o\**r***l siillieii nily Iroio hih op* ra¬
tion 1*1 In- .ibb* lo leave tin* (o in*ral
Ilohpiiiil. 11* is jniw at Inim**, mak¬
ing hiK'h jtrogi* <s that in* lio]>es to iia
abb- to r*‘iui'n to his olliee within a
w* ek *ir i**n .lays.
Surrender to Spaniards
London. \ dispatelt to Hi
Kxprt-ss fniiij 'iangii-r says tin¬
man n ib*-, on*- of tin- ]-ieh(-sl :ii
important in Morocco, hurr.-mh
eiuniitioiialy to tin* .Siiaiiiaid
111 *-} lainl*‘(l at .Mhue* iiia.s Hav
fJtlawa. Canada’s wh«*uf yield of
391.N19.000 bushi ls for 1925 is-the pre¬
liminary *-sCu ato of the bureau of
Btulislics recently Issued. The yield
last year w*t.s 262,'i()l>.O0u bUhliels.
Tile uverag** >l**lds In busln-ls p»*r
atr«* f*)r all Canada In 192.5 an* i**porl-
ed a.;: Fall win at 29.9,'mst >*'ur 2S.8;
apring wln*at J7.4, lust y*‘ar II.3; all <r<>ps ar*-dr*>jght and rust
wh<;at 17.S. compare*! with 11.9 bush-
rls per acre last y**ar.
Th*i fall wheat estimul** for this
year l.s 23,697,(>00 hirshels and sprlug
wln-al 368,122,000. The esHmato lor
oats is 5i 1.827,000 buslnds, as ooin-
par.-d with 405.976,000 biitdiela in 1924.
Tin* ry»* crop for 1925 Is OBlljnated at
15,527,000 bu&helrt, eoinpared wiUi
filightly ov*'r 13,080,000 Jo 1921.
in the Atlantic provinces "Hie
weather ha,i be*.*n ideal and a bounti¬
ful harvest Is unlieipated.'*
In Queb.)c Hie pruspi-el for grain
crops is geieiaJly favoriible. '
In Ontario “sph-ndid harvest weath¬
er has prevailed, threshing Is W'ell ad-
yaDc**d and grain crops are yielding
well above the average." The weather
In Manitoba has b«**‘n ^favorable for
harvesting, and Hireshiiig will become
general at the end of the month. Coii-
alderuble d.itnnge has b*-en caused by
rust, both yi**lds and grad*- of wheat
beiug r*‘du* - I but Hi* >i- lds ur** hiIH
g4‘neral)v abov*' Hios*- of tin* i*-n-y**ar
av**riig**. In Saskatch*‘wun all grain
ript-ned *'Hrlv. Except lor nhowt-rs,
about August 2::. the weaHi* i was v* ry
la\oi'ablt* 1 * 11 * harvesting, and cutting
was wi‘ll advane*-*! at tin- « ml of Hie
nioiith wh»-n thit-shing had b*-gun.
' 'I'ln- maiu s*iur*:** *)f th*- liijui’v to
New Dominion Loan
Sets A Record For
Government Financing
Ku Klux Klan In Berlin
H<'rllii. 'I'll** H* I’liii poliet* aniniuii*'*-
ihal tin y liuv*- uneov* r*-d a movement.
]n*ude*l by Hire*- rnil*‘d Stales *IH-
zeiiH, and parHclpal*-*l In by about l.'itaJ
(h-rmans, fur the establishment of an
order lo be known as Hie "Knights of
Hu* Fi*ry Cross." ahiiig th** Um-s of tin*
Ku Klux Klan.
Seize Canadian Schooner
N*‘W London, Conn.—Tin* Canadian
s<-ho*in**r Dawn, of Lurii*nlHU-g. N..S.,
was K**ized ill Narragaiisi tt Hay wln n
it grounded wliile atit iiipHng (oeseap**
from a patrol boat.
ronmlo. .Imlging by o:*lers r**<*t i\ • lolhiw***! its
* d lor tin- l).iujini*m loan. ;925 has al- arrsngi*. as
most b**l a -*** 01*1 Uir sue:€s!--iul gov- oid*r.-< ir»iiu
• rnun'iit fiiiainlng. Ord* rs lor liiiuii sisnun* a **o.
elal iiisiituiions la*\«- b****ii largi-i Hiaii tin* ii**u loa
ill t'iilnr ot tin* pi-'-vioii-^ reiuiiding
hiaiis, * a* h if whi< h wa.-'. r*'*-oribMl an
HO highly sm e*-hslifl. Ma<l all Hn *>r
d«*rs re<<*i\.-d from in.-^Uuuitiiih b**ji
n*'e*‘)ite(l ill ii'li, only a .-mall amount
of bonds Would havi- h« * ii availabl**
for otln*!’ classes of iiiv*‘stors. |i 1-
uinh-rslood, Iiowi-\l*i. (liut tin* larg**
orders liave b***-ii seah-d d*)wu bi tin
Hyiulleal** to tin *-xl' iii ol moVi* than
50 ju-r e« nt , and. us a r**Mill, nnu*-
than (lilt hall of Ih** loan will b*- iival'l'
all!*- to Hn* ‘'iiiall* i pilvali- bu.veiH. In
udopilng HH < plan, Hn .-.v inlleatr has
It Is a luel that a in-w 1 auiiini<*Ji
loan brings out a **‘rlain class ol iii-
\**.''tor who will allow ids fumis lo r. -
luain idh* lo.- hcxciat moiitliH pii viou--*
ly. Tin* !’• eopiion aecordi'd Hn* in-vv
loan is a tiihiite lo iln* financial st.ibil-
ily of Cana la and ('ana<iians. 'I'l-**
fa<'i liiut C.inada has proven Ini.-elf
iuJly eapabi - of linaiieiug ln*i own i* -
((uiieiaents plav.-* an imjxiiiant paM in
so slftiiglln-idiig Canada’s (n-dit
abroad Ihul In r sei'uriH**s are in de¬
mand in the loiiieipal mom > maiki is
ol iIn- w Ol Id.
I^arl of a record bhlpiiieiil of tiuclors ami ihr.'sln-is from ili
which i**fi iher*; recently over Canadian Pa* III** lim-s for
Alchtmy And
The Atom
Reconstruction of Civilization May be
Neceteary Through Advance of
Science
Man has ncH>D able to tiultato na
lur»' In (1 mlcrocoamlc way In the lab-
oratory nn«l 'hereby has f;n(n*‘d much
knowh'dgr. Ho can produce artificial
llghtninit anil thundor. ho can Ronor-
ato lu*Ht oQ’ial to that gl.'on out by
tho HUn. ho can tranainuto metale, he
can broak u:» Iho atom. Hut It costs
t(wi much to do any o( those things,
and so far as known nuturo doos them
all without half trying and without
blowing up. A Connan chemist pro¬
duced gold !roni morcury, but he had
to I xplulu that It would cost to do so
Kno.non im mneo.
Hr (terald I. \\'undt, of the depart-
nioiit of physics and chemistry at
rcnnsyhnni.i Stale ('oil-go, told a
eclontlfic Ra luring of hU experiments
In rolou^ing atomic onorgy, and «x
ptoas'Mi the bollof that so^m this jk)W-
t r would 1 h* at the dlsiHjsltion of man.
I' this j>r«'dlctlon comes true. It will
moan tho reconslnicilon of chllizutlon
iltrough a ii.w « nergv that will make
industry Iml 'pondont of r«»al und even
hydro ideclrl.’ po\v» r
Hr Wundt plawd a tungsten wire
In a >act]um tubf through which he
sent a ciirr.nt, with the result that
nmr** I'norgy oanio otit than wont lo,
and the tumtdon was transformed Into
holtuni Hut to bring IhL- about he
had to u.si- a tomp'Tature of 60.000
degroos rahi'ouht it. This ireniend
(»us heat, as tho Helen;l.'it admitted, Is
Old Cnmcnhim Will
Not Surrender Preitife
Reading, 'Ritlng and 'RItmetIc, Being
I Better Taiight Than In Former
Ytare
The ‘ (»ld fashlonud buspuctac^od
tcH)kko» por who could add a column
of figures at lightning speed was al¬
ways considvrt'd aomoihing of a won*
' dor In his homo office until the adding
i machine and other uncannily accurate
‘office devices camo Into use. Then
^ his lm(K>rtance sufTored something of
an eclipse because any nlrablo-flngor-
glrl with a llttlo training could accom-
, push the same mathem.itlcal results.
' Nov»‘rihoIr*ag tho third of tho three
H’s” In the old school curriculum Is
not quite re.a ly to surrender Its pres¬
tige In the new mechanical order of
things. As a prelude to higher
mathematics for the future high
scIhkiI and college student or the bet-
lor paid trades and imsitlons, U Is as
indisi>ensablo as ever. Hupt*rlntend-
ent of Schwl McAndrew found, loo,
lliHt It was flowed as valuable lu still
other dircctlops.
I
-V canvass of thirty-five i>erson.s In
widely different vocations, from ac¬
countants lo contractors, architects
and salesmen, revealed a very decid¬
ed opinion that the grade school'
courses in Vltlimeiic were Invaluable
In developing accuracy and rellablllt)
among the pupils.
Fifty yeari ego when the pre-emin¬
ence of all threo “H's * In the school
curriculum went unchallenged, As-
►Istant Superintendent of Schools '
iNdano gave an arithmetic teat to the
children of tho seventh grade In the
Commanitn Ii Inwet life
I Entire Giving Up Of Life Of Individual
For Community
I Tho human sluggard la told to go
; to the ant to learn Industry, The hu¬
man aoclologlst might be told to go lo
! the ant to learn sociology, for the ants
I hare carried one form of aoclal life
. to a degree not yet negriy approach-
■ed by any group of human beings.
. This Is that form called communism.
Perhaps wo can learn from the ante
; whether we even want to go as far as
I they hare In the way of communism,
at least this Is the suggestion of Dr.
Vernon Kellogg, secretary of the
National Kiv’iearcl^Councll, in tho cur¬
rent Issue of the Scientific Monthly.
, Dr. Kellogg explains how with all the:
I ants and with those kinds of bees and
, wusps which hare adopted a coniinun
al life, there Is an entire gtrlng up of
, the life of tho Individual for the life
of the community. Kach worker anl
or bee or wasp works not for Itself but
for the eommunlty. The worker col¬
lects food not for Itself but for every¬
body. It his no children of Us own;
! but It hi!lps take cafg of tho children
of the community, which are all pro¬
duced by ihe queens. lUologlcally.
tho comniuuil insects are vor) suc¬
cessful. Their eommunliles ihrivo;
their Species persist and Increase.
They live In all the lands of tho earth
except In extreme Arcllr and Antarc¬
tic regions, and on tho summits of
lofty tnouiitains, and their numbers
probably exceed those of all other In-
socta. They have been called the
most sucrcsHful of Insect kinds Ilut
Immortality of War
Selontifle Mathtmatical Carteinty That
Nobody DUs Cntlroly
Profeiiaor Charlea Henry of the Sor*
bonne, one of the leading mathema*
tirlans of Franco, declared that ho had
proof of the scientific mathematical
certainly th\t "nobody dies entirely.**
Raying religious had sought^ ex¬
plain the phenomenon of death and to
promise the Infinite prolongation of
life, Prof. Henry went on:
"Among scientists there are means
for ro**asurlng the liidlstlon of all sub¬
stances—for everything emanaios
radiation, your lamp, vour stove, your
cherry tree are warmed by the sun's j
rays.
C'alculafe that ladlntlnn, which Is
due to heat, duo to eleetro-magnwtlc
elements uni due to tho attraction of
our globe. If you make the ealrula-
tlons conscientiously, you will with
anguished surprise find yourself up
against somelhifig unknown, some
force which is neither one or the other I
I of those. [
"Uepeut ‘en times ten hundred ’
i times, and calculate your many i
i long nights—always you will discover!
this hidden power which manifests it-j
I self, but remains utterly elusive, an!
|ld»»nl fiuld, defying itlUthe scales and
microscopes in the world, but always
present with obhilnato Constance.
"When bodies die, they arc of far.
too subtle an order to pro-oc,cupyl
themselves with tho psycho-chemical |
process of death. What happens to
them? As they cannot dltsappaar. |
are they happy? Nobody known. -they must procewl elsewhere lo find ^
Ab InlerotiBf ExperinenI
Btlisva That Moaquito Blits. Causing
Malaria, It Curt For Insanity
Malaria mosqnUoea are being used
at Epsom mental hospital In England
to infect patients suffering from gen¬
eral paralysis of tho Insane to deter¬
mine If the resulting malarial ferer
will alleviate or cure their Insanity.
The treatment was developed on tht
continent, where It Is claimed that the
shock of malaria acta on the organ¬
ism of the spino and brain that are re-
•ponslblo for paralysis, destroying
their virulence. •
Infection Is convoyed through the
bite of a mosquito. A patient la tak¬
en Into H ro >m with double doors and
windows. Mosquitoes are released
from a box to which they are returned
after they havii bitten tho patient. For
tho malarial fever that devidops, the
patient Is given thu ordinary treat¬
ment.
Epsom is the first nrltlsh hospital to
try the expniment. Tho reaction of
the paralys 'd Insane to uialsrla was
first observed when an epidemic of
malaria In a European nsylum left
many of tho patients materially Im¬
proved
Sunlight Good Brain Food
Mental Tests Show Proper Exposure
Increases Intellectual Output
In addition lo their bciu'ficlal effects,
tho rays of natural or artificial sun
light are declared to serve the pur¬
pose of a bralu 1 o(h 1. aerurdlog to Sir
Henry Uauraln, a Urtllsh surg«.*on.
Teach Goodwill
In Schools
Laagus of Nations WouW Get Errors
Out of Hlotory
Tho olimlnailon from histories, geo¬
graphies and other textbooks of "er¬
rors" which lend to pcrpetualo na¬
tional animosities and mtsunderstand;
Ings is one of tho alms of the inter¬
national commltteo on intellectual co¬
operation which has just completed
Its permanent organization under tbe
auspices of tho League of Nations.
Tho rommlttoo will have headquar
ters In Paris, whoro tho French Gov¬
ernment hga donated a building as
tempqrary uffices and 2.000.000 francs
for operating expondituros. in uiorO.
than two score countries national In¬
tellectual co-operation committees
have been formed. The work of all
will bo ctdiated , and central ofllces
designated.
The idea back of the elimination of
(those existing "errora." according to
, Dr. L. r. A. Van den Drandeler, of
, Holla ml, who proposed a scheme for
International textbooks, Is to lay a
foundation for mutual respect among
.nations which will be loestlmabln
value to tho future geiieratluns U\
.their International life.
Dr. Van don Urandeter HUggesla the
, adoption of a universal textbook on
history, geography and certain cultur
I al features of iatornatlonal life. Tho
book Is to be complied by the inter
national commltteo and chapters on
I various countries written by cllUons
, of that country qualified to undertake
the task. Intcrnatlongl goodwill,
mutual i<loal8, and matters which pro¬
mote nppreelatlon, friendship and
peace should be stressed, while things
that engender racial prejudice, mis
understandings, hatreds and disorder
should be "toned down" or eliminated,
the committee believes.
iiuich higher than the sun’s heat and
ro.non degre 's hotter tlmn tho hottest
star.
Just now It costs Immensely more
lo relea.se fully the energy within the
atom than the rolurns Justify, On
HDoiher plan », that of universal elhlc.s.
It Uiight be dangerous lo turn over to
tuun. In hH pr* s* nl state of advance¬
ment, the whole secret. He has not
r*paij the obligations plund upon
him for hU full: ' In the hw -at of thy
face ►hall tlwu eat br Hd”
another enve'ope In order to recovef
the balance and stability of temporary
harmony.
"That little something which gives
you a dlstinotivo personality among
tho rollUnns of your fcllow-beliigs is
Immortal. You hand your 'sour on
to others, that’s all."
Chicago public school system. Tho
general avenge for the pupils was 63.7
r»T cent., and only 3 per cent, papers
were correct for every problem. Five
I»er Ti nt, of tho pupils failed contplote-
Propi*r ex|M)r.uro to bunshtne, he says.
If carriud out In a rational and In^
Htructed way, increases the Intellectual
output, and hu offors as i»roor, conipar-
atlvc mental tests mado on two groups
of chlldrcu iu two different I.«ondoo
hospUals. Those who wee** receiv¬
ing H|»ef lal treatment at one Institution
where sun exposure was regularly glv
on. iiiunlfested such great mental
superiority over uuother group not so
treated that Iho difference could be
credited only to the sunlight cffvcl.--
Fopulnr Me( hunlcs.
Gold Found By Divining Rod
Father Innocento do I’ioverra. a
Capuchin mouk who Is lepuitel by
mountain folk to be gifted with super¬
natural powers. wa.< hcarchlng for
water wltli a divining rod In the Apen-
nine Mountains recently w'hon the an¬
tics of the rod anuouncdl gold. Feas¬
ants started digging and found goM-
bcarlng quartz which assayed four
grams of gold and 36 grams of silver
to the ton nod a company has b»en
formed to mine tho gold.
In Juno, 1923, Superintendent Mc-
Andrew administered the samo test
lo the seventh grade pupils in ten
public schools chosen by loy The
general average of all the (»apcr 0
was 76.1 IKT cent., and t^.2 iwr cent,
of the papeii meritetl the cureted
100 marks of the grade school pupil.
The lowest average of all the papers
In a single school was 66 - P<'r cent.,
the highest S9.2 per cent.
Visual education may at times se«*m
lo threaten reading; the typewriter,
’thing: and the adding and computing
machine.^, ’rlilimcilc, but the r«sulls
of the tcKt would indicate that the
‘■Tl»ic«» U’s” of tho school curriculum
HU- being Just a little bett«‘r (aught
London Hii Gloom Gab
Place Where Peopio Can Discuss All
Their Troubles
In Loodoa the latest thing Is to be¬
long to a’ aloom Club.** Them one
nee^l no longer mask an aching heart,
but may proclaim one's woes and
grouches to the, for tho nonce, sym¬
pathetic audieco. High and the world
siglis with you. weep and you weep
In comiMiny, tluii is. If one is not afraid
of damp or mildew.
As a variant lo the Intervals of sad
talk, the clubs arrange excursions to
Evidence That Europe
Settlers From Ireland
Forty-nine Irishmen. In charge of M.
Mulalley. have arrived In Nortle rn Al¬
berta and will b4' locateil In the Kd
moiiton district. Tho . party came
from Cork. Limerick, ('uilow' and Hub
llu countlns. Archbishop OT.«eary
and other dignitaries and uOlclals of
the archdiocer^ have undertaken to
il*ul IJlH iff'tfl oWi^t K" "1 g|»
1 every chance to make good.
Was Cradle Of Man
The ?kull of an anrl.>nt Oallloan
who lived at ('apernaiim some 20,000
to 30,000 years ber>»re miracles began
to be p»Tfornied may be taken as e\i-
d**neo that Et;rope wa.^ the rra<!le land
liure. Sir
‘A^both man and ol
(oni ih»- MrtiMh Assorfn«ion lor the
Advancement of Science,
The skull of which Sir Arthur spoke,
a mrxlel of which h** laid on the table
I
te-.side him, U . that dl.<«covered by
FrancU TurvUle IVire, of the Drlilsh
Seliool of Archaeology, a few months
ago. In a cave on the northern shore
of the Sea ot Halllee. near the site of
the ancient city of Capernaum, where
Christ performed many of his mir¬
acles
ly diverslfi.Hl modern school currt
culum - Chicago Post.
SKl-lNG IN MIDSUMMER AT JASPER PARK
Japan to Experiment on Raw Product
For the Diet
With the popular appetite for meat
steadily Increasing In the land of Nip¬
pon. It Is DOW ])roposed to experiment
on tho raw pioduct for the diet, ac¬
cording lo Hr. Issa Tanimura, special
government food commissioner, who
is in ilte United States gathering data
In-the inter ests of an economical meat
supply for hla nation. During hU
stay her**, Hr. Tanimura has conferred
with oflklaH of the national livestock
and meat board, and other authorlttles
of thu industry.
*’\Ve have long be«*n ac('UstoTn<>d to
*‘atlng our firhes raw. so wlty can¬
not meal b«‘ used In lb© same way,"
Is Hi© logic offt red by Dr. Tanimura.
I "Of rour.se, w e aro not prepared to
say as yet whether ruw’ meat will be
practical, but we are at least consid¬
ering thu ixjssslbllitles."
Tho Japanese are learning mure
about thu food value of meat pro-
leliJH. calories, etc.,” Bald the visitor,
! They can do very well without corn,
I milk und a number of other foods, but
they are now familiar with the taste
of meat and feel that they must have
Proud Of Combination
Phon* Girls in London Hotel All Have
Red Hair
Someone ha.s just discovered that all
(In* girls In the u h phoiie exchange of
the Hotel Savoy, I..ondofi. are rod hair¬
ed. Why? Well, It seems to have
Just happened, though a Harley phy
slclan when confronted with the In
teresting i>iohlt>nis that the situation
suggested, said U had been found that
red Italred piH)plu Were more ''than
usually gifted as far as their oral con-
irlvanceH are concerned.
At any rat**, the eight young wo¬
men who BiK'iid their days answering
the Hashing Kumiaonses of Indian
prices and American lultllonalrea
are extraordinarily proud of their
Titian combination, and incidentally
bear out the medico’s pronouncement.
Over 800 Million Pounds of Sait
Produced in Canada Annually
Hid you use you/ hundred pounds of
salt last year? If not you did not got
your Khare lor, according lo the naiur
al rosouiT.es Intelligence service, there
are over kOO million ixmads of ihU
necessary 8Ubstanc*e used or sold by
producers in Cuuuds annually. Even
thou wo use less than the cltizi'^s uf
(ho 4.'Ditud mates, for In I9k’4 they
consumed oi© hundred snd twenty
pounds pur cuplts sod have been
kn(»w'u lo consume as high as one bujt
died and twenty-seven pounds.
Practically tbe whole uf the Cana¬
dian production comos from near
Windsor, Ontario, aUhough tho Mala-
gssb deposits of Nova Scotia are be-
couilog of incresBlng Importance to
Uio fishing Industry especially. The
Ontario deposits BOAioUiues reach a
thickness of 230 fuel. Despite these
splendid minus almost half of the »>alt
used in Canada Is imported.
Gave Him His 8tart
riu’ physician's .*400 was enf»*rlaln-
Ing his playiiiatf al his home. They
wefH playing at h* lag doctors. ’The
son uiilocku'l 4 door and dUclusud a
skclotoa lu iltr terrified gaze of his
playmate. "H'k nothing to be afraid
of." Ii4> bald "It’s only an old skele¬
ton." Wlt-wh whuru did It come
from?" quaveiud llu* uibur. "Ob, 1
don’t know Papa’s had it for a lung
time. I t x|u ct It w*as bis first
pall<*nl
The problem is, according lo llu*
c(»iiimis&ion -r. to supply meat at a
su(lh'h>QtIy low' price to be available
to the musses. It la possible for tho
well to do to buy it. ho said, but be¬
cause of low w'nges the cost is often
prohibitive for tho laboring classes.
In the face of this situation it Hcoms
that all classes have now' cornu to the
realization that meat Is Uiu necessary
food element lo keep their UhUus fit.
.Askud if religion In any way intei -
fercs with moat cousuniptlon In Jap¬
an, the doctor was emphatic in his
negatlvo reply.
He pointed out that lu the eon-
Eumption of meat, tho Japanese are
very econmulcal. They cat it all and
there Is un waste to be consigned to
the garbage can. It is Interesting to
nut© tlmt they do nut make use of it
lu suup.«, us is done In America.
He Did
\ iutifuT who was bu.'-y sent u mes¬
sage (u a neighbor with u hastily
scribbled li'ii* ruqu<‘Hilng the loan of a
donkey
When tin n«'tgbbui received thu
note he ahso was vtry busy, and had
no time to decipher the tad wilting,
so he suhi to the mesiunger:
"Tell your muster that 1 will com©
my-elf.
British Columbia Mitisrals
The mlubi'M deposits of liriUsh Col¬
umbia continue to command the atteu'
lion of cspUallsts, particularly those
in the United States whence the bulk
of the capital for tho development of
the natural resourcea of the prorlnco
has b(M*n deftvod. English and East-
om Canadlau capital ii also laying a(-
tenllou to the mineral lesources of
Briilsh Columbia.
Professor.—"What makes you think
that they had picnics during the stone
age?"
Aasistaiit. "I'vn Just discovered a
pctrlfiuU peanut butter sandwich."
lie " I hcre’s a ceitalu question 1 ve
wanted to a.sk you for w'ceks.”
rihe -"W'.'!!. ti.-ik it. J*\e Imd thu
aitsw cr r* udy lor niunihs"
Fair lovers uf winter sports gatheied on the Cavell Glacier at Jasper Naliooal Fark on August
tryout on (he ash blades. From loft to right: Miss Flora MucHoiiald. Falmouton, Alta ; Miss Horls
onto; Miss Peggy Armour, ivrih, out.; Miss Marjorlu, Neal, Toronto; Miss Mareu MacDonald, Ediu
Miss Marian (Irccnc, .NVw Vi>rk fMly.
Never worry about trifles,
(hut lets the water into >our
]«‘t H mil again.
Streamers of cutorod paper often
are used to dcrorat.* ,{ruvcs In China.
V
Canada Must Hold Fast T
Hone GrtWB S««4t
DonhiioBt Need Popvlntion
Ra^ld Progrfii Dapvnda On Strong
Immigration Policy
Continued and rapid progreaa in the
Dominion! depend! upon the conttn*
ued and rapid Increase of Ihetr popu¬
lation, say! the London Morning rosl.
Such Increaia can only be accomplUh-
•d by means of Inter Iniprrlal migra¬
tion. There are in this rountry a
great many more persons than the In
dustrlea of the country ran. support.
Hut before any large scheme of emi¬
gration ran be rarrlrd Into exocuUon,
It Is necessary to ensuro that new set¬
tlers in the Dominions shall be pro¬
vided with A market for tholr produce.
Groat Drltaln Is the best market In
tho world; and by moans of a policy
of preference tho products of the Do¬
minions may bo given the advantage
over foreign products. Hut, again,
the posBlblllty of emigration on a great
scale depends upon tho wrrrklng to¬
gether of khe Dominions with this
rountry. How essential It la to
their populations with Engileh stock
the Dominions hnvo not yet thorough¬
ly Understood. It appeared in the
course of the parliamentary debate
that, by reason of delay overseas, some
60,000 persons, approved by the au-
thorltlea, are waiting to migrate.
d Taxation Mu
ssarily Follow ]
"or Better Publ
eman
Component Parte Of E
mpire
Severing of some of the old ties of
the nrUlHh Empire Is natural and rea¬
sonable progreis. but few In Canada
think on that account that tho empire
Is dlsInlegratlDg, said Sir George
Foster, In a public address at Vic¬
toria.
"Some peoplo say It
New Profetsion For Women
Canadian Huance, of U'luniprg,
points out that we aru too apt to err
out against what taxation takes from
u.s, without reckoning up In the other
column what tauitlun doits ittr us
It Is not 80 much tho luxallou that
should be rrlilelzed as the way 1;i
which tho taxes are spent. If thejit
aru things which can !».> dl.-.p. n:,eil
with as nrcdleHH luxurli s, iImu lexiM
should not be raised In unit r to pin-
ehaae them Hut clUlli.d men. In
comnuinltirs that are orgunlxi-d, dc
iiiand so many Kervlros. timt ilie rhP‘'
(luestlou is *0 supply Ihe.m* servt(i'.«i
III reasonable cort to the taxpaji r wli..
wants them.
C'Ulzeus, says Conadlan Plnnne.*,
cannot expect to bo considered eon
blsti'iit K they clamor for iiiiprovr
inenta in one breaHi anil for lower
taxes in the next, tor no progress es'*
b-- made In that way. WJiat peopl.*
gut in the way of public Iniprov* inent
tht-y must pay for, and tln*y can’t liavu
cvei j thing they want and lower tas<.i
too.
At the .same time, while public
Kpi ndiug In lei ent j eers has run awu>
bejond all ooiinds, anjbody who liopi s
to get back to the low te^fs of 20 yoar.i
ago, U Indulging In an clu?lve dream
To get back to tho lower lax leielii
would mean to get back to the inferior
school RjKlems and the bad roatls and
poorer lighting of thos'' dajs.
Taxpayers are paying toi more than
they w« re and In many ca.ses more
than they shculd; bui It should not
be forgotten that they are getting
more. loo. and tliat In m-ny Instances
wliRl lliey Hie getting Is worth the
price they piy
‘rhla U no argument for extrnvj
gance. Exirsvaganco with taxes 1 «
a wicked Injusiico upon those whose
hard won elinings contribute to the
public treaiU-y. ami Is not only rilrcD
I> bunleneo'ue. but U ma«le Indlreetly
pernii'ious by the poison of a deuiorsi
Izlng i xainp'e
Bird HospItsI In New York Does
Flourishing Business
Miss Emilia Stelnaclier, nloce of the
lata Dr. J. J, Henna, one of tho foun¬
ders of tho French Tlospltal In New
York, and for many years chief sur¬
geon there, has tho unique profession
of bird surgeon. Hecclvlng her sur¬
gical training from her uncle, Miss
Stoluacher applied her skill to fi*alh-
ered pots and has restored hundreds
of sick birds to health during the past
Iwenty-throo years. 8ho was tho
only visiting physician on the staff of
tho late Miss Virginia Dope, well
known bird doctor, who maintained a
home for birds In New York for many
years.
At Miss 8telnacher‘s hospital and
boarding home for feathered pots nro
birds suffering from various tmublcs.
One bullflncn is slowly getting feath¬
ers again on hU bald head, the bald-
nes8 being duo to an over-rich diet at
the hands of a fond owner. A hand
borne green prtrruC thut had been too
weak to stand and had laid for days
on a cushion, Is now talking again wMth
a return to hla previous spirits. A
troopear is recovering the use of a
badly mend ‘d leg that Miss Stelnacher
resi t. A once, blind canary now sees,
after the surgeon had remo\ed three
growtlifl from Us eye,
MIhs Stelnaclier claims that a real
love for blrls is n necuasury basis for
ail Rucci-ssfui treatment and care of
(hem. 8liu operates on llttlo ennar-
le.^ to remo.’o tumors, iiiend.s broken
legs and wlng<, prescribe* ipectal diets
for upset digestions and Inteetlnal dis¬
orders and train* blrd.n In good habits.
■HUrh as dally biithH and neatnes:i with
tbeii seed.
would not
msko any dlfforenco If the empire was
a republic and headed by a president
or a monarchy headed by a King,** Sir
George added.
'Tlut the nrlllsli Empire, scattered
as It U over the surface of the world
and composed of races and Irlboa of
all colors and beliefs. Is held logethor
by that common sovereignty of ours.
”lt is symbol of sovereignty that has
mado tho Urltlsh Empire what It la
and wo must hold fast to that link that'himself
welds Into a whofo all the scattered' profits
parts of tho empire
irouDie of gathering. Excess of use
■f this privilege has led to tholr scarc¬
ity and In their wild statu to such prac¬
tical dlsappc>arBnco as now to require
iheli cultivation. Particularly Is this
true of H<'nera snako root and Golden
Seal. Mr. Adams, In dealing with this
subject, gives tbo commonsense ad-
vlco that unless a farmer can convince
that he can reallto larger
per acre from the growth of
drug plants than from the usual farm
products, ho would bo unwlso to nt-
lempl It unless as a sort of subsidiary
means of supplementing his Income.
However, he can run no risk by dorot-
log a small plot of about an acre to
drug plant culture as an experiment
for a few yuars. Ho might grow at
least ten dlffeient sorts of those beat
suited to his locality. Tho plants for
which there Is demand are: Golden
Seal, which Is collected In autumn af¬
ter tho seeds have ripened; white mus-
Urd. tho seeds of which, and Black
Mustard, when ground and mixed, con¬
stitute the mustard of commerce; Sen¬
eca Snake Root or Mountain riax,
is collected In autumn and can be
grown on any poH suitable for field
crops; Marsli Mallow, Sacred Bark or
Bearberry. Anise. Caraway, Coriander.
Protecting CuiboB Herds
^HnngariBBs Bay ManitobB Famu
I -
Former ColonsI of Huiasrs Will Bring
Family Out In Spring
Two Hungarian arlstocraU will be
seen tilling Manitoba soil next sum¬
mer.
i Couut Taxa Palffy and Jullns do
‘ Plosoek. tho latter a former colonol of
Hungarian Hucfars. tiavo purchased a
; section of land at Hazelrldge, 40 miles
I from Winnipeg. They will remain
: on the farm this winter until next
spring, at which time tho former
; colonel will return to hla native land
to get his family. Tlioy both slate
they want to learn farming by experl-
lOnco and will do tho work themKelves.
Indications
British Boys For Alberta
Contingent of Boys tor Training at
Alberta Government Farm School
Arrangements aro now being made
for bringing over this year's contin¬
gent of British farm boys for training
at tho Alberta Government farm
schools.
Hon. George lloadley has asked
tliat they bo hero by tho middle of
October as the schools wriU open Octo¬
ber 27. Them Is to bo a maximum
limit of 300 boj's, and they will bo
routeil direct from England to (he
three schools at Vermilion. Olds and
Claresholm.
rnd»*r the plan to-followed this jeer,
the British lad* w-lH pay their own
w’ay at the schools, and tho overseas
settlenieut (H)ard will ’‘erounerate the
Provincial Government on a monthly
per capita basis.
It 1* autlclpatufl tho full quota will
be reached without dlfficuity.
Canada
was to havo quite a colony of titled
Hungarians was so^m in tho announce¬
ment by tho Hungarian aid bureau.
Winnipeg, that Baron Chavosay, an
other recent airival, hnd purchased a
2.h00-arre ranch hidween Calgary and
Banff
Ignorant Of Canada
Plenty Of Flowers In Canada
Adjustable Water Wheel
Settlers From United States
Many Cultivated In England That
Grow Wild Here
I.Ady Uyiu:. who I* an enthusiastic
flower lover, wishes to transplant
some ('anadUn flower* to her English
gard« ti and to that end sent for her
Many American Farmers Taking Up
Land In Western Canada
Ri-iuruad irc'ln what hu n-gards ns
a rumurkabiy «*ncouraglng insprcGoii
of The vari>u* ugenrles In tin* mid
Market For Western Wheat
Norway Will Get Whtal In Canada
Says Commifsioner
Most <»f the wheat Norway requires
this year will rorne from Cauadu. ac¬
cording to A. Johunnes.sen. of the Nor¬
wegian food ctuiifiilssloti. Olso, w'ho
vl::.lled Winnipeg, on lil* nay through
the we.'*t to htudy crop and inaiketluK
comliiion* .icre.
Many I'utotu-mi miller* and grain
nit-rchiiiitH .suffered such Iieavj la.-tees
during the slump In wheat prices
Irorn K* bruiry to May thU year lluit
th. j will be afriiid of making large
coni I a( I - lor next year he sahl
All ihe iiiijK>rl trade of grulna and
flour to Norway !.•< handled by the
Norw»g!au Goveimnent, Mr. Johan
tn't'-eri expldin* d. It is a provlHional
meuHuye, adoiXed during the war, and
which Ihe •ioveriniu'iu rilll tluds ad-
tUahle lo k-'ep in force owing to uii-
iUTOKible agricnhuial coudiilon* in
the couijlry. IToiu Hill to HI17
prUatu linimilers n.* wt II as thu
govi rntncni handled Import trade of
graln.-^. In 11^17 the governineut took
h i#vei cnllr •!»
wiucn
nas uiiijciio uC't It
w'a.st**d, Sto?kholm Is henceforth to be
made a dusi-freo city.
After conclusivo tests the authori¬
ties have discovered that by sprink¬
ling streets or roadways that are elth-
^ur macadamized or unpaved with the
live In which wood pulp lias been dU-
Isolved, (hey bi-comu coated with a re¬
silient FUbstance wld< Ii holds the dust
down evpn In heavy IrufTle. At flr.st
the streets so treated are a hit sticky,
but us soon as the liquid has evapor¬
ated the iT'.^lduo forms a brown coat¬
ing that in many respects excels crude
oil or any tur llko substance. 'Hiy
slight odor also dli<appeurs very
quiekly. la the past the pulp mills
havo been In Iho hubil ol pouring (his
cheniirui laden liquor away.
In the suburbs of Stockholm a piece
of roadway ha.s b<en treated with the
new liquid every tw’o weeks, ajid now,
the surface Is smooth aud hard as
though coated with somo kind of
usphult. I
Mr. Ferguson told the journaliiit*
(hat Tvheu ho was In England the
thing that uniur.«>d him wuh tlu' want
of knuwlrdg-* of (Canada and condMou.*
In f'anada. "1 tound that peoxd<- knew
far more iboul .\ustralla and New
/.ealand tbun they dhl ol^hl.^^ country.
Wo need iiem ov<t ihere wlir^ I'-ully
understand conditions In Lamida "
♦‘rn 8tat«‘*, J |j/uro tt'alkcr. supiTin
lemlent of imii Ipruilou in the I nlicd
Slates, states that from April 1 lo Au
gust 31, of this year lh« nuuiber of
utnner-i -,1 ni up from theso Htatca to
tile land in Western Canada sbowji
an Jnciea,.; j;o per cent*. o\er the
tlgui<-.s for ;he saino ptrloil and tioin
the same n glon la?>l year.
He stated, too, that from March ;
to Augu.^t ni thU jear the ranadiaii
.National Kallwajs. the Cauadian I'ael
fle Uallw-ay ; nU the Hudson^ May
t'oUipany sidd more land In We.-^terii
(Canada ihau in u .'''illui period lot
tlo- pa.'t tv-n jeiir.-?.
• All We havo to do." said Mr Walk
er, ' Is to get tho.^^e W»'«lern Aiuerl
tmiy to be found in gardens, and tln.TO
w-eru fregue-iMy cultivated at eoiLsIder-
able rogt. but which out hero In Can¬
ada people literally trod underfoot,
Gny were so plentiful. Sho urged
tho nnmber-i to rultivuto rock gar¬
dens In Jasper Her Excellency said
It was asto li.-hlng liuw many people
over.‘»eas thought that there were no
lowers in Canada.
Reviving the Ancient
Flowers that bb>ome/l in ancient
Egypt 20 Centuries liefor** Clettpstru.
aud wheat and barley, Uiken into tin
roj'ul tombs to .sustain IMiarauhs on
their posl-iu.irteiu (ru\eU. have been
brought to Chicago bj Prof. Juiiie.*
IP.-nry Breasted, noted EgjptologUt of
the Chicago University.
Find Statue In Ocean
A Well preserved stutue of antiquity
was found In the eea off tho coast of
Marathon by a number of fishermen
The statue is of bronze and represents
the life-sized cast of a youth. Greek
experts declare that the statue Is ex¬
tremely valuable and have compared It
to iho famous statue of "The Youth of
Antioch.”
Clinic For E*l<lmo
Tho Eskimo suffer from tonslUtiH
and ttdeuolda. So Dr ('urtia aud Dr.
Charles A. Pryor, Philadelphia, plan
to establish a 6llnic for tousll tregC-
ineiit at Flor«.'nce Cove, Labrador.
Ivory 1* u.ituli'.ed from tho tu.sks of
tho walrus, hippopotamus and a few
other beujits. us well as from the ele¬
phant.
Alfalfa Is Good Horse Feed
No One Has Ever Found the Nature of
Light
dmmorlalUy awaits (he research
worker who can solve the mystery of
the nature of light.
Tho theory thut light consists of
waves Is apparently Hubfitantiated by
such phcnoiueua us rellcctlon.
On tho other hand
Borrowed Fashion
Indian girls on thu Glacier Nutiouai
Park reservation bob their hair Just
like tho pale face city misses. They
use rouge, loo, of a hue that blend*
with their copper colored coiupleilon
And the wrinkled old squaws make it
for them from herba which they gath
er on the wtKjded slopes of the Kucky
MounlaluH ' Out m the west thoso
Indians uko It tor granted that tho
pale lace girls gof tUo Idea of che< k
painting from the American Itidian
cu.'ftom, just us tho Indian girla took
tho hair bobbing habit from (heir
"w’blto bisters.*’
many experl-
ilfalfa n-gu jUieuts eot-m to uphold the quantum
lained Ihelr | t*it*t>ry. tho theory that light consists
on. and did ilelinlte particles of energy.
‘'S I’ot-d cost I’hyslclsts And thom.'^elves up
jagainiit a real dimcully. One wU In
urj ing from' 1-^^ sclontlllc world says that (hoy are
< rp nelecled Gio problem by UBlng the
f horso ot w'avo theory on Monday, Wednesday
1 alfalfa and Friday and iho quantum theory on
limoiliy.. Tuesday, Thursday aud Saturday.
Whjt Advertising Does
Ad verllslug— published news of
available goods, investments and serv-
icos- <-nlarK« a tho market aud creates
now' wauts. More advertislug. more
production, more coutumptlou and
moru accumulation of wealtht Ad-
vurtiblug 1* thu fertilizer of business,
making a poor soli good and g good
soil better.
losls perioruied uii 112 student.'* at
Colgate I'nivorslty by Dr. Donald
I,ail'd, iudicito that the averago mind
does its best work at fi urn. and tho
poorest work at -1 p.m. Wedne.-iday
is tho best day of Iho wc».k and Satur
day the poorost.
First Census Taken
rmll two jears ago no (‘eobU: of thu
population of i^ale.stlno had been tak
on tilnco the time of Solomon In 192S
them were 83,7h4 Jews in the couu
try: today tho total Is estimated at
108.000.
Buying More Canadian Goods
Germaoy Is buying mora Canadian
goods. In tbo twelve mouths endod
July, ( anadian exports to Germany
w'ere |3k,438,368, an iucreaao of four¬
teen liiilllon dulliu's. Cunadljui pur¬
chases ip Geriusuy, ou the oUier hand,
wero 16,835.265, au Increase of less
than one inliMoii dollHr-<.
The Baltic Is the hlialloweBt sea,
only 43 yard* in averago depth Next
conic.* thn Adriatic, wUh an uterago
of 45 yards ui depth
Advertising aud circulation man¬
agers, ropreseutiog all the Important
dally newspapers of Western Canada,
togotbur with representatives of ad-
rortlsiug agencies and publishers' rep¬
resentatives from the Atlantic to the
PueUlc coast. ugHlit held their unuuut
convenliun at Jasper Bark Lodge and
were snapped by the Canadian Nation¬
al Railways photographer. Every eily
In tho west, from Winnipeg to Victoria.
li.C., Is represented In tho group,
while agencies froiu EUlcago, Mon¬
treal. Toronto, Wliiidpeg and other
titles also had representation. At
the close (»f the convention ou Au-
gUht 17, the two ineeliugH expressed
their delight with thu beauties of
Jasper National Park aud tbeir ap-
jiruclutlun of thu cam shown them
by the lodge UtiinugeJUi'llt.
Many a wojnun's ciihtf ului U ut u
target called mau.
Worse —*T>id (be speaker ulectrlfy
bis audlenc )?”
"WuiWe, buddy, be gasKed It.”
X,
V
X
S ''
TTTE RECOEDER, EAYMOND. AI.TA.
Disease Among Eskimo
Adopting Whito Mon't Methods May
Lead to Extermination
Not many yt'nra wll! rlupao bofori'
Since ISIS two billion dollare In i *’'® Ef'blmo will bo oxtornilnatod by
overdue Inronio tnx and delinquent, *^*‘'***^*' tlirough adoptinfr white men'a
br»‘n collected In the
method of habitation, declared Dr.'
D. K. Scott, who recently returned to;
Kdmonion after apendiiiK ono year at
Ahlavlk, In the delta o fthe Mackenalo
niver. lie has been acting aa medical
ofilcer to the Hoyal Canadian Mounted
Police Arctic pusta and working!
among Indiana and Ei^klmo.q. in behalf
of the department of Indian affairs.
W hlle this prediction has been made
by others In the pnat, Dr. Scott adds
I that Eskimos and Indiana of the delta
penalties have
Vnlted Staten.
The chimea of "lllg Ben*' In the Pur
llaroent nuildlnga at London were
beard plainly In San Francisco over
•pedal telegraph and cable clrcuita.
Sir Francis Lewis Castle Floud. Lon¬
don. permanent secretary of agticul- '
ture and flshci les sine© 1920, has been I
appointed a member of the overseas
•ettlement conimitlee. i
The a. roi.lnnc service of the Eur | arc also |.iirrorli.K from Int^atinarpar"
op.. Union, comprUlnK 16 norlal navi to callnR raw flah,.
Ration companl..», la to be conlln.ied r.^blta and other moats. This, howl
during tho winter this 5 ear for the ever, he claims, la not a serious prob
Hrat time, contend with, hut such diseases '
Mrs. Isabella Forke, mother of as cancer and appendicitis, he Btates, i
Robert Forke, leader of the Progres- are beconilntf too prevalent among the I
live parly In the House of Commons. Indians. 1
died at the 'atter s home In Pipestone In the old days, when jinow houses |
recently, aged 91 jears. were their temporary homes, the Ea-
Provlslon that one-third of his mil- klmos were Iwalthy, states the doctor,
Ion dollar estate be used for the re- but since they commenced living In
lief of school teachers, was a feature cabins and thacks, tuberculosis has
of the will of the late Rlnion Grata, broken out among them, and this dread |
Philadelphia. menace threatens to wipe them out.
Field Marshal Pnron Plumor, new Anjong the delta Indians, Dr. Scott
IJrltlsh high commissioner for Pales- that In all but ten per cent,
tine, has arrived at Jerusalem and *'**>*'' symptoms of tuberculosis,
taken the oath under the commission Their methods of living were such that
of Palestine. I**** disease was on the Increase.
Profe.«or BatlMa flraasl, the famou.. «>' I**- ‘n-l ord^ In the
/Wswir \
bacteriological and physician, died re
cently at the age of 70. He was wide¬
ly known In the International medical
world as an Investigator of malarial
diseases.
north, Dr. Scott declared that the
Kskhnos and Indians of the Western
Arctic regions are tho most law-
Chsrming Envelope Chsmlee
When It comes to undergarments
abiding people In the world, and he yo'i can be Jqst as frivolous as you
could not recolelcl ono police case Please. Just a few runnlpg-stltehes,
during the vear he wh« umonr them ^ hand-embroidery and some
The London Dully Mall says the 1 i dainty lace and ribbon, and you have
In the eastern regions, however, where n choice bit of underwear of your very
Poor Renmcrotioii
For Technical Work
Vary Oitcounaglng For Those Who Qo
In For Profssslons
A New York newspaper is making
an appeal for the better treatment of
that rity’a engineering slaff. It Is an
extraordinary sidelight on the bread
I and butter value of a loehnleal educa*
lion when college graduates must ap¬
peal for compensation almost as gen¬
erous as that of plumbers, bricklayers]
and plasterers.
Of the engineers employed by the
city of New York, and tho same scale
presumably Is common throughout the
continent, ten per cent, receive less
IJmn ditch diggers. Ab<»ut twelve pel
cent, earn aa much as foremen of
street labor crews; while tho majority
are not so well paid as the everyday
merhanlcal craftsman.
It Is a peculiar fact that the so-
called "white collar" employments, In¬
cluding bank clerks, bookkeepers,
draughtsmen employed by architects,
d^igliiecrs who lay out the wosk for
their better paid ditch diggers, and
mining engineers, arc all tn compari¬
son to the trades and to unskilled
labor shocklagl) underpaid.
If there Is not a racial turn for the
better In these matters the next gen¬
eration Is going to witness a shortage
of college men seeking lechnlesl edu¬
cations. If a young man cannot
make a decent living at his chosen
profession after spending a mint of
money and four or live j'esrs of hjs
time In a university, he Is a fool to
pursue It.^The Toronto Saturday
Night.
loud
achleve-
state
China’s Snbstitate For War
Rrillsh Government has ordered the
arrest of all Communists conct rned In
plots which hau* been brought to light
during the past few weeks to Influ¬
ence trooi)s at the Ald« rshot ramp and
elsewhere.
The "newsboy plane" Is the latest
aerial stunt. A Springfield. Ill., news¬
paper Jrled dellvt*ry of papers by drop¬
ping them at the farmers' doors from
an aeroplan'. and three-furths of the
farmers reported cafe arrhal of their
papers.
missionaries have not penetrated, an own making. The diagram pictures Boycott Has Become Favorite Weapon
occasional murder was committed, but simplicity of the step-in cberaiae Against Other Nations
this, the doctor says. Is really tho Es¬
kimos own 'aw at work.
How Russia Goes After Business
of both the front and hack are cut In i boycott. It Is their substitute
over the hips and slightly gathered to ' News that In South China
the upper pirt, Insi^rlng a perfect fit.; Canadian goods ire Included In the
sues 3<t. 40 and 44 Inchea bust. SUo hnvmtt **"
3(1 bust l.s suitable for 34 and 36. sUe against Imports from 40 . UnUU back.
Great Britain will be disquieting to
Horixontal
1—Gave forth
sounds.
Forego«*s.
11—Plant much used for
soups.
13— Freeze.
14— Nostril,
16—Determine.
16—N o t a b 1 e
menta.
18—Neuralgia.
79—Northwestern
(sbbr.).
I 20—Prefix meaning again
21.—Provided that.
23— Negative.
24— Opposed.
28—Ditch around a cas¬
tle.
30— Greek letter.
31— Thoroughfare.
33 —European coilntry.
34-“ Embalmed dead body
36—Pedal extremities
86 -.Self.
8R Weird
43—Part of "to be."
4o—In that manner.
46— Itiglit (abbr.).
47— Fourth note of dia¬
tonic scale.
43 —Cnnjly crowd.
50--8elf-respect.
53— Ix)ng slender marine
fish.
54— Ardor Inspired by
enthuslaam.
56— -Single unit.
57— Mend.
58— Public road.
69 -Running knots.
Will Live On Beans
Fomenting Strikes In England In t^tid size 44 for 42
Order To Sell Their Own Coal *^*’''*‘ '*'*'** requires merchants and manufacturers In the
The Poris correspondent of the New "*«*^^»“**; who have dealings with the
York Times reveals that at the very' Our Fashion Book. lUustrslIng the Fortunately they are rela-
Ume the ruling spirits of Bolshevism newest and most practical styles, will most cases It will be
were egging on the llrlilsh coal min- Interest to every home dress- to refrain from the use of srtl-
..r. Iu UH.fr strike tC" ^ J'rtc. of ,h. b.^k in c»nt. the do. ospor.od to Chins of mark.
agents were c^n^
ders for Russian
VsrtlcsF
1 — Csrniverous
mal (eonir.).
2 — Pieced out.
3— Dexterity.
4— S o u t h e r o
(abbr.). f
6 --Perlsh.
6 — Damp.
7— Within
8 — Cistern.
mam
state
9 —Ireland.
10—Measure of time.
18—Proofreader’s murk.
16— Marsh
17— Rest.
20—Revolves.
22—Effervesce.
24— Prank.
25— Opinion.
36—Pacific island of the
Polynesian group.
27—IJirge cupolas.
29—Suffix denoting full
of.
82—Birthplace of Burns.
85—Blazes.
87—Single seed of corn.
89—Desires earnestly.
41— Pselfier.
42— Wrath.
44—Cast the feathers.
47—Passage charge.
49—Impede.
B1—Decay.
82— Jx>w resort.
58—Aeriform fluid.
66— Point of compass.
67— Act.
Crippled Veterans
Work Fpr Princess
Awirtr Tn Last Waek’s Pazz!e
Solving the Food Problem For Russia's lish and Wt l.di coal during tho expret-
Population ed shortug«^
A newly discovered foodstuff, which That U the kind of friends for the
may In.sure Soviet nu-^Hia against fum- real laboring men of the world to
Ino and enable the government to np- have! Because they killed off. or
”aii^r.Si tft.Jl. 7 f r . ' Tno ra il
for millions of her population U oc- brains and training enough to inan-
cupying ofilcial aiteullmi in Moscow, age Industries succeaaruily, and to
The new food la the product of a Buda- market produ( ts FU.'coEsfuilv the
pest physiologist. Dr. I.adislaus Berc- Bolslu vikl find that their mines and
leller. who is conferring with the gov- facloiies cannot compote with the
ernment n-garding the production and "capitalistic" Industrlos of other na-
dlstribmlon of Soja bean flour, a food- tions. Whafls simpler than to get
■luff wliich Is said to possess great everybody eUo to go on strike so
nutriment. Fifteen or twenty flour that Russia will have s chance to
IK uireai. Moscow s ^opy. Each copy Includes one con- .bowing the country of origin Our ^ Porter, waiter, market gar
assing Europe for or- pon good for five rents In the pur- ki / * * \ ^ origin and laborer nr« h*inin<r
coal, .0 replace E„r. cha.c of any pattern. ; ->■«« Hour “
Have Naarly Completed Bedroom
Suite Ordered By Lord Lascelles
porter, waiter, market gardener
... make
and lumber. There Is also a growing beautiful pieces of
trad.' In automobiles' over two hun- produced during Ihl.s gener-
dred last year - and Caiuidlun w hisky ^ cream lacquered bedroom
but both were doublles.i mainly for'*'**” Honduras mahogany ordered
the use of residents in the foreign lascelles for Princess Mary
^ .U.C.
• We may coacelvably lose for a time ' . J-oi»tJoii Dally Mail reporter saw
! part of the flour trade that some west- , ” niasslve suite growing In the
* ern mills have been cultivating In UUsbled workers of the
. China, but even the keenest of the; Roberts Memorial Workshops,
boycotters will have trouble In dis- *’“**'***” Road, S.W., not one of whom
^ criminating between Canadian wheat *1“** before' the
• ... and that grown In Dakota and Mlnne-’^**^’ ^*^* 2 h he was wounded, of
How To Order Patterns
Address—Winnipeg Newspaper Union,
176 McDermet Ave., Winnipeg
Psitern No.Size..
Province..^..
.. uklut ivuHsia will navo a ciiance to
mills are In operaMon. but so far un- sell somethlngT-MInneapolis Journal 0 ^^^*
equipped with the proper machinery _ _
to provide food for ten million per- n * • ss i rk
... cnc p,"u..d Wakes Drastic
Laws For Motorists
sons. In nutriment value, one pound
of Soya bean flour equals two pounds
of meat, plus a half pound of wheal
flour and Its usefulness above all U as
a meat and egg substitute. It Is esti¬
mated that the Introduction of Sova
Must Obtain Driving Permits and May
Have to Pass Examination
Every man and woman who drives
bean flour on the scale now contem- ® *“otor car In Ontario next year will
Receive Fewer Immigrants
first liave to obtain a driving permit,
Hon. a. S. Henry, minister of public
woika and highways, told the annual
meeting of iho Canadian Afftomoblle
Association at Toronto.
__ The issuance of these permits would,
^ * A « probability, in duo course be
Old Furniture Not As Comfortable Aa fniinu.Ai «
followod bj conii>uIsory examination
for all drivers, ho said. Any convlc-
nic act infractions register-
plated would enable the So\let Gov¬
ernment to release 600 tons of meat
and eggs dally for export.
Uncomfortable Antiques
Modern Kind
While very hlgli prices are paid for tIon~for"tin
antique furnlturo we know that such
furniture I.s not always the most com¬
fortable In which to recline. Whoii
Queen Alexandra was visiting York
many years ago as I'rinoess of Wales
she stayed at the treasurer's house,
and dining one night at the Deanery
as the guest of Dean Purey fust, she
dropped Into u lounge <halr and re¬
marked: "How 8 i)lendid to drop Uito a
eomforlable chair, after loo much Wll
liam and Mary." Our ancestors ear-
ril'd thoinselves well, but it must huvi-
b«-en at the coal of many wi*ary hours
tp' iU in Htralghl bucked chairs.
earofully)
Find Graves Of
Massacred Christians
Belicvtd To Be Victims Of Jap
Revolution In 1637
Dr. Earl R. Bull, Methodist Episco¬
pal missionary in charge of work In
Loo Chow Islands. Japan, has discov¬
ered the bu.Ial ground of 31,000 Chris- ; Reduced By 68 Per
tlons, believed to have been killed In ! Cent. Due to New Laws
an uprising during the revolution of j Immigration law has reduc-
3637. iCd by approximately 68 per cent, the
An Inscription found near foreigners to tho I'nlted
grounds by Dr. Bull slates that In all according to analysis of Imml-
33.000 ChrlsliaDs were eluin, behead S**®’*®” statistics for 1921-25. Many
ed and burled. nationals of foreign countries are leav-
Tho heads of tho victims wore,*'*C the United States for their liome
ccl against a motorist would be enter- > cmi'itrles have not
Id upon his permit and could lead to another place, so there j ‘o AH their quotas, but the
the permane it revocation of license ‘'•“"co of tliom unltlnit ImmlBrallon has been reduced by
drivi*. ; fgalii. the luscripllou said. emigration of aliens. ITgures
Bota. ' trade he Is now practising.
Tbe case Is one In which Canada la ^ ''^***^ either only one leg or one
penalized through no fault of her limbs
own becau.*ie she flies the Union Jack. finished most of the woodwork
It must bo set against the many others ^"^drobe—many people
In which Canada secures marked ud- 7 , experience of the furn-
vaulages lu foreign trade because she , * “‘*'®** B^en one so
is a member of the BrltDb Common- ***** dressing table, wash-
wealih of Nations.—Toronto Globe. ®***"‘** bedside tables, and other
___ Articles in the seven-piece suite will
soon be ready for the lacquer. The
I foremun lacqucier was before the war
s market gardener.
, There are more than a dozen big
' panels to be treated, and much of
It will fall to the brush of an ex-
walter, who Is the moat remarkable!
I man In the department,
j "About a year ago he came to us
; for a job," said an ninclal. "He was
50 per cent, disabled, and wo followed
our usual course of lr)lng him In every
department until we could find some¬
thing that suited.
Passinf Of Newspaperman
Former Editor of Western Papers Dies
In Arkansas
James A. Crulkshank. aged 43. \Ht-
eran newspaperman and formerly ih wh
editor of the Saskatoon Star. Sahka-
toon Phoenix, Regina I> 08 t and Rt glnii
Morning Leader, U dead at Lliile
Rock, Ark., where he held the po;-iilun
of bUhlnoss manager for the Dally
News.
- Mr. Crulkshank, born at Bcar-sden.
near Glasgow, ScotluDd, was foinu-rly
editor and proprietor of. tiie Ilaiiley
Herald, and St one time was an i-in-
ployoo of tho Northern Crown Bank.
An abscess of the brain was tlu* cau^e
of death. He la survived by hU
widow and six children. Tho lum nil
was held at Little Rock, Ark.
Discover Huge Jewel
Cache In Leningrad
May Abandon Dirigibles
U. S. Government Virtually Decides to
Concentrate on Aeroplanes
1 hq Shenandoah disaster probably
will result in temporary. If not com¬
plete abandoninent by the government
of its lighter than air uctlvliles.
Open Big Conference
Ctvrmany, Croat Urlluln, tho trial.' hooka unt l ho - ,
Froe Stato amt Sweden al.o failed toi,a° he waa nearly dizzy and
flit their quotaa if"l^h “in. until ho la
one of tho best painters of lacquer pic¬
tures in London."
The Traders In Dope
The pro'iibiilou of the iianie In
drugs has tlie licarty suppoit of all
Canudiuna except the comparatively
few wretched being<? who are addicts.
Hidden in House Of Former Tailor To
"He seomud to be fulling, and at last Czar ,
rru 1 .1 . AAA,A I* said. ‘Can vou draw'7' He nabi im ^ bouio formerly occupied b\
The .naeaaci^ praottcally wlpod out <>w tha :0.94S moro Italian., loft tho,hod never tried but wa. wHtlnrto do C«r. who,o name 1,
all the tail,one contorla In the conn- l^kjtod Slaton than entered it during s„ our |O" «
‘ 'artists, who first made him do pot-' ***^***‘*“* buslncsa In Paris, ait im-
' niense quantity of gold and silver arti¬
cles, set with precious stones and dia¬
monds, has been discovered. Ono
Jewel box was found to contain 47\goId
articles of elaborate workmauslilp and
a number of tho finest bluo dlnnioiids
weighing 338 carats. The And also
included a great number of gold en¬
amelled cigarette cases, znuff boxes,
rings and tiepins.
The total Immigration was 294,314
for ?he yo 4 u-. us compared with 706.896
during the preceding year, before the
Turks Abandoning Old Customs
win be
. a,'dJ' t! , fore tlH, Io„ of the .‘^h.-nundonh, and
. ■ " "nimin who ^jn, this new proof of the vulnorabll-
.;.d ..8 on .ho w. uknease. Of those uy of dlrlgildc, seem, more certain
sinieted xviiii tho drug habit has no
symfjathlzer i It Is one of the most
d< .-pteiible crlnieH. The splendid
work, tin reforo. of the Royal Canadian
Seven Hundred Delegates Attend Child
Welfare Conference at Geneva
An Immense uffort to Improve tho
what Jt will bring, the I.akohurit air opening i "“d •“'o now ‘ho;
station probably closed helium exta-ac- congress, at-', qV *“**°**‘ I
tton will he ourlalled and from now on i *'>• •*‘-'>'eate, from 58 coun- i “u, „ Tjo I ‘-Tr Toarl ^ ‘r
tries. Including the United States and 130.l9u or nearl) two-thirda of
many of the Latin-Ametlean JJ. pub- S'^ar.
lies. Two hundred reports, dealing •
with various aspects of tlie child prob^ OhtylnQ Orders
lem were submitted to the congre.-^s L ^*'^’**^ Napoleon was once visit- «...
Andre Oltamara, Swl„ mluUler 'ol O"
education, wa, tl..eled president of ■ "‘"IThiI by a French '«omml,.,alr» lia, decreed that all
the congrea,, and ll,o Ma. chlone,, “* l>«»s ! European fash
of Aberdeen was (l,o,en to head the Olscloae
education section. I Jj** ***»'*>***>'• Finally, iho sentry said:
___ I “I have orders to let no one puss, and
Hpproprlulloas and energies
concentrated on aeru])Iunes.
The progr.innne hud virtually been
decided for reasons of economy, be-
Muit Wear Hats and Dress
Like Europeans
and moro the newly-born
Republic Is abandoning old
customs and substituting
Europcap methods, whlto the fez and
turban as national^ headgear sucm to
The coun-
More
Turkish
Turkish
than ever to be adopted.
Th.
The Age of Speed
cities and towns of Rliode Is-
Moun...d ffllce In acar.lilng out thoac u,nd have act 35 mile, an hour a, the
u". T." . r'" l-roper .peel for auto, on highway.,
lloii. J he Ottawa Journal.
In the long burled city of U] of tho
Chaldees, a piece of sculpture has
They contend that having spent vast • up, show ing a lively picture
sums on roads they cannot afford to<°^ workmen carrying mortar up lad-
When ev ryhody says jt. nobod> have them*cluttered wiih cars moving' ***■*■**■
knows it for certain. along at only 32 or 35 miles.
A Biiii^i ship building firm pre-
Intervenlion in love ij eqnivuUnt to Children In Glasgow may travel any .diets that motorshJps will replace
distance on the street railway for one steamships. It Is building 33 largo
penny. Some of Hie routes extend up vessels
\V. N. V. 3591 i twenty-five miles.
I would not let you pass If you were
Napoleon Bonaparte himself."
Napoleon turned back. Tho next
j morning th© sentry was promoted to
bo an officer and he later bccamo ono
of tho emperor’s most brilliant
generals. *
ion and wear bats.
Only prlo.jts are to be permitted to
wear turbans and tliey must uncover
within government offlcos.
declaration of war.
wlilcli will
gasoline motors.
bo Dpi-rated by
Clerk.—"Yes. sir; a lady’s belt.
Wiiat waist measure?" %
Blgboy. "Oh, about as long as my
left arm”
Mors Evolution
Stuttering Mose. — J-just think.
t*thal b-b-beautlful b-b-buttorfly one©
C'camo from a cocoon.
Uastus.—Goo l^rd. Iso guess we is
tho ancestors of overythlng.
Demand For Domestics
Saskatchewan Farmers’ Wives Are In
Need of Household Help
Saslcatchewan farmers* wives are
looking anxiously for tho houHchold
help which the bureau of labor and In-
dusfilcs of tho Provincial Government
arranged to bo sent to them from Hm
British Isles ^ndor tho Imperial Uov-
j ernment overseas settlement scheme.
' Th bureau coulracled for 100 domes¬
tics to be sent to Saskalchowan dur¬
ing the year and barely half liave ar¬
rived. Most of the demand 1.-, from
farm women.
Crown Prince Umberto of Italy has
been allowed $80,000 a year for nialn-
teounce.
Some men are so unlucky that If
an earthquake should break out It
wouldn’t swallow the land until the
day after they Ijad paid the taxes on
U.
f
V
TIIK I?K(!OUlM':i{, HAVMOM>, AI/FA.
pR.HAMIlTOMs
PILLS
FOR
HEADACHE,BILIOUSNESS
CONSTIPATION.
INDIGESTION.
KIDNEYS,LIVER,
BOWELS.
DODD'S '
IKIDNEY
PILLS ^
Ceremonies Obserred At Sea
A CUP OF HOT
BOVRIL
is afilne "PICK ME UP
Ships Qo Through Certain Ctremonits
Wh«n Passing Each Othsr
Ships at sea have a "languaKe*’ of
their owix^when they wish to converse
with or slfDal to one another. Nearly
all big steamers carry wireless In*
Ktallatlon, but In addition, every vos-
sol of this typo is provided with a
steam whistle or siren, a mechanical*
ly*operatod foghorn and a bell. Sail¬
ing ships aro obliged to have both a
I mechanical foghorn and a bell before
I they aro allowed to enter or leave a
port. When ehlps pass one another
at sea certain ceremonies are observ¬
ed. Thus, a merchant vessel meet¬
ing a warship is expected to dip her
flag In salute, a courtesy acknowledg¬
ed by the'naval commander in a simi¬
lar manner. Liners are generally
saluted by "tramps." while when one
liner moots another the Junior captain
dtps his house flag first.
Their eyes met. For at least half
a minute there was not a sound. Ne-
peeso did not move, and her breath
camo BO softly that Raraee could not
hear It.
Then she said, almost In a whisper:
"Bareal Dsreel Upl Baree!"
It was the first time Baree had heard
hts name, and therw^was somothlng,
so soft and assuring in the sound of
it that In spite of himself the dog In
him responded to li 1ft a whimper that
Just reached the Willow’^ oars. Slow¬
ly she stretched In an arm. It was
bare and round and soft. He might
have darted forward the length 6T hU'
body and burled (ils fangs In It easily.
But something held him back. He
knew that it was not an enemy; he:
knew that the dark eyes shining at
hlrn 80 wonderfully were not filled
with the desire to harm—and the
voice that oamo to him softly was like
a strange and thrilllnlg \nuslo.
"Baree! Dsreel Upl Baroe!"
Over and over again the Willow rall-
j ed to him like that, w hile on her face
she tried to draw herself a few inches
1 farther under the rock. She could
not roach him. There was still a
I foot between her hand and Barcc^ and
she could not w'odgo herself In an inch
And then she saw where on
A CAPO\POLISH For Every Purpose
worn 8TOVCS-^8t««n Polish.
FOR 8TOVK PIPt8—Odorioos Jot tnamol.
poll 8HOE8 -QoW Leaf Dreaalng ar Britlah Mllllary Pellah
THE CAPO BRAND 8IONIPI18 QUALITY
Historic Old Firm Fails
A handy sire pack¬
age for occasions
when half a pound is
“)U5l right.”
SONOFKAZAM
lames Oliver Curwood
A LOVE EPIC or THE FAR NOSTH
Copyright, 1917, by Doublcday, I'ago & Co.
BABKK, SON OF KAZAN," a Vltagraph IMcture, With Wolf, the War Dog
is an Adaptation of This Story
The Importance Of Faith
Doctors Like Patlerts Who Believe
They Will Recover
A SwlsB watchmaker who died re¬
cently at the age of 100 was diagnosed
by phystclaoB in his youth as incur¬
ably tubercular. He studied bis own
case, adopted a systematto, reasoned
plan of living and continued in the
enjoyment of an active life far beyond
the usual span. He had the will to
j live, call it by whatever name yon
wish.
Nurses, and physicians, know bow
I Important is the patient's state ot
\ mind. A will to live, a strong desire
COLOR IT NEW WITH
DIAMOND DYES
death that Wakayoo was facing now.
There was a third shot—the last.
Wakayoo sank down in his tracks. His
big head dropped between his fore-
paws. A racking cough or two came
to Daree. And then there w*as silence.
SYNOPSIS
Baree, wandering In the woods, came
upon Wakayoo, the black bear, and,
fascinated, wiitched him knock fish out
of the pool. He learned where Wa¬
kayoo cached his provisions, a discov¬
ery that solved the food problem for
the young wolf-dog. One day ho sud¬
denly found himself face to face with
Pierrot, the trapper, and his daughter,
Nepi eRo. the Willow, who a few days
bi'forn had shot and slightly wounded
BartM*. thinking him a W’olf. Nepeese
now pursued Baree, who concealed
himself beneath a great boulder.
15-ccnt pack¬
age contains direc¬
tions sg simple any
woman can tint soft,
delicate shades or
dye rich, permanent
colors In lingerie,
silks, ribbons, skirts,
waists, dresses,
coats, stockings,
sweaters, draperies,
coverings, hangings
—everything!
Buy Diamond Dyes
CHAPTER VIII,
As Ncpcose gazed about the rock-
wallod end of the canyon, the prison
Into W’hlch hey had driven Wakayoo
and Baree, Pierrot looked up again
from his skinning of the big black
bear, and ho muttered something that
no one but himself could have heard.
"Non, it is not possible." ho had said
a moment beforo; but to Nepeese It
more
the other side of the rock there was a
hollow, shut in by a stone. If she
had removed the stone, and come In
that way—
She drew herself out and stood once
more In the sunshine. Her heart
thrilled. PI if rot w'as busy over his
l,ear—and she would not call him. She
made an effort to move the stone
which closed In tho hollow under the
big boulder, but it was wedged In
factor In a recovery. A cheerful,
buoyant manner Is not the least of a
good physician's attributes^- The Buf¬
falo Kzpresi.
Doc.—"Well, what’s troubling you?**
Patient.—"Froqu'*nt pains In the
back.*'
Doc.—"11 re aro some pills; take
one fifteen minutes before pains
start."
no other kind—
and tell your druggist whether the
material you wish to color Is wool or
silk, or whether It Is linen, cotton or
mixed goods.
One Explanation
"Too many motorists nowadays can
spell go, but can't spell stop," a De¬
troit Judge says. Which may be a
result of having eight cylinders in
the engine and only four wheels with
brakes on.—Kansas City Star.
Five minutes—and Nepeese could
move the stone. She tugged at it.
Inch by Inch she dragged it out
until at last It lay at her feet and the
opening was r« ady for her body. She
looked again toward Pierrot. He was
still busy, and she laughed poftly as
sho untied a big red-and-whlto Bay
liandkercbief from about her shoul¬
ders. With this she would secure
Baroo. She dropped on her hands
Keeps EYES
Clear, Bright and Beautiful
WnctKlurintCo..Chic«fo.forErcC«reBook
At the first sign of Illness during
the hot weather give tho little ones
Baby's Own Tablets or In a few hours
ho may be hoyond aid. These Tablets
will prevent summer complaints if giv¬
en occasionally to the well child, and
will promptly relievo ihcso troubles If
they come on suddenly. Baby's Own
The Oil of the People. Many oils'
havo come and gene, but Dr. Thomas’
Kclectrlc Oil continues to maintain Its
position and Increase Us sphere of
•’My dear, the doctor says a brisk
walk before going to bed will cure my
tivfiriilnp** psrh vtuir. Its sterling i«
enti of the gun, and then he heard that l
flenftming crash that had come wlih|
his own hur‘, wlien the Willow’s bul¬
let had burned tlirough his flesh. He
turned his yes swiftly to Wakayoo.
The big bear had Htunihled; he w’as on
Ilfs knees; and then he struggled up
and lumbt r«‘d on.
'fit/* roar of the rifle came again, and
a second tine^ Wakayoo vrent down.
Pierrot could not miss at that dis¬
tance. Wakayoo made a splendid
inni'k It was Hlaugliter; yet for Pier¬
rot and Nepee.se it was business—tho
bu.sin(‘.s8 of life.
Baree wu.s shivering. It W'as more
from exciteineiit than fear, for he had
lobi his own fear in tho tragedy ot
these inoniolUs. A low whine rose In
hi:; throat as he looked at Wakayoo,
who had risen again and faced his en-
emit s his Jaw s gaping, his head ^
swinging slowly, his legs weakening
under him as the blood poured through
his lorn liing.s. Baree whined—be-
cau.^e Wakayoo luul Ashed Tor him, be-
caii.<ae hu had coim* to look on him us a
friend, and because he knew It w'as
and knees and then lowered nerseii
flat on the ground and began crawling
into the hollow under the boulder.
Baree had moved. With tho back
of his head flattened against the rock
he heard something which Nepeese
had not hea.'d; he had felt a slow and
growing presjuie, and from this pres-
sure^be had dragged himself slowiy-
and the pressure still follow’ed. Tho
mass ot rock was settling! Nepeese
did not see boar or understand.
She was calling to him more and more
pleadingly:
"Daree—Ban e—Baree-■**
Her helid and shoulders and both
arms were under tho rock now. The
glow of her eyes was very close to
Baree. He widned. The thrill of a
great and impending danger stirred in
hU blood. And then—•
(To be continued)
i Tabluts should always be kept In every
home where there are young children.
; There Is no other medicine as good
and the mother has the guarantoc of u
; government analyst that they are ab-
I solutoly safe. They aro sold by all
druggists or will bo mailed on receipt
of price, 25 cents per box, by The Dr.
I Williams Medicine Co., Drockvllte,
; Ont. A little booklet, "Care of the
’Baby In Health and Sickness,*' will be
sent free to any mother on request.
qualities ha^e brought It to the front
and kept it here, and It can truly bo
called the oil of the people. Thous¬
ands have benefited by it and w’ould
use 00 other preparation. .
"Well," returned his wife, "I’ll clear
the room so that you can walk, and
you may as well taka the baby with
you."
Tenacity of the British
Ability To Hang On Is Secret Of
Empire's Success
For the British the empire and its
ways are set for eternity. Days and
years are nothing. They just keep on
going and although they ask them¬
selves occasionally w'hen Ramsay Mac¬
Donald gives up Singapore, or the coal
miners tie up industry, or the dole In¬
creases, or a squadron loses, or nearly,
loses a naval buttle, whether the em¬
pire Is to survive, down deep they
know that question Is not worth ask¬
ing and does not deserve an answer.
They may have to hang on a long time
to an enemy who knows they are lick¬
ed and gel mad because they don’t
know it. All they know la that time
Is lung and all that's necessary is to
keep at it. Not so good today, but to¬
morrow is another day. Chicago Tri¬
bune.
dkeyourovm
• Old-fashioned Ideas may be the beat
at times, but you can't run an auto by
feeding it oats.
*‘8he drew herself out and stood
once more in the sunshine."
TEETHING BABIES
Thousands of Thom
DIE EVERY SUMMER
The hot weather is very bard od
babies etarting to cut their teeth.
On the first sign of anj loosenosa of
tho bowels the mother ehpuld giv'o
a few doses of
Home-made mustard pickles.
How delicious — and how easy
to put up. Here's the recipe;—
MUSTARD PICKLES
1 qt. small onions 1 Urge cauliflower
1 qt. Lucunibers 2 heads celery
2 red pepperi
Pee! onions, cut Tcgetables fa small
pieces, corer with weak brine and lei
htand overnight. In the mornins
bring to a boU and drain off.
Take 2 cupe brown sugar, 1
flour, 6 tablespounfuls Keen’s D.blr.
hfuttard, 1 tablesi>oonful tuimericand
2 quarts vinegar, boil this mixture
fur twenty minutes, stirring contU
tiually. I'uiir over vegetables hot. Let
stand ten days, stirring every day,
then bottle.
As sho quested tho ragged edges of |
tho little meadow for signs of the dog-
pup, her thoughts flashed back swiftly.
Two years ago they had. burled her;
prlncess^mother under the tall spruce
near their cabin. That day Pierrot's
sun liad set for all time, and her own
life was filled with a vast loneliness. ‘
There had been throe at the gravosltJe '
that afternoon as the sun went down— ’
Pierrot, herself and a dog, a groat,
powerful hujky with a white star on
his breast and a white-tipped ear. H&
had been ho * dead mother’s pet from j
puppyhood—her bodyguard, with her
always, even with his head resting on
the side of her bed as sho died. And
that night, tho night of tho day they
buried her. the dog had di.sappenred.
lie had gone as quietly and us com¬
pletely as her spirit. No one over
saw him after that. It was strange,
and to Pierrot it w^jis a miracle. Deep
in his heart ho was filled with the
wonderful cuuvlctlon that tho dog had
gone with his beloved Wyola into
heaven.
Bv4t Nepeeso had sp.*nt throe win¬
ters at tho Missiuiier's school at Nel¬
son House. Sho had learui'd a great
''deal about 'white people and the real
God. and she knew that Pierrot's
thought was impossible. She believ-
(*d that her laotlier's husky was either
dead or had Joined tho wolves. Prob¬
ably he hud gone to the wolves. So—
W'as it not porsiblu that this young¬
ster shg and her father luid pursued
was of tho flesh and blood of her
mother's pelf It was more than pos¬
sible.
Baree had not moved an inch from
under his rock. He lay like a thing
stunned, hU oyes fixed steadily on the
scene of the tragedy out In the
meadow.
Baree wanted to approach. It was
like an invisible string tugging at hii
I very heart. It was^azan, and not
Gray Wolf, calHag to him back
through the centuries, a "call" that
I was as old as the Egyptian pyramids
uml perhaps ten thousand years older.
I But against that desire Gray Wolf was
The Oldest Living Thing
Bee Found In Solid Roc-k Is 8hov/n At
Tororto
J. E. Wilson, Toronto builder, Is ex¬
hibiting a bee, ncstllDg In a solid block
of blue atone, which he received re¬
cently from a quarry near Owen
Sound. When the block of stone was
split, says Mr. Wilson, It was found
to eontain a cavity In which was a
rosebud, with a bee partly burled In
its dried petals. After being dis¬
lodged (he bee was able to crawi.
Accepting the story as fact, tho bee
in question is undoubtedly tho oldest
living creature, unytliiiig from 25,000
to inlliions of jears old.
Minard't Liniment used by physicians
May Queen Opens Bridge
May Queen Kathleen cuf tho silken
ribbon at tho recent ofllclal op»‘nlng
of the new bridge over tho South
'fhompsoD River at Kamloops. B.C.,
which cost $238,000. A bevy of pretty
girls representing Canada and her
provinces took a prominent part In the
ceremony. ^
Read Alberta Woman’s Ex¬
perience with Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound
This will quicldy offset tlio diarriisa,
vomiting and purging, and, perhaps
aavo tho baby's life.
Put up only by The,T. Milburn Co.,
l^iAttcd, Turoutoi Ont.
Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator
will drive worms from the system
w ithout Injury to the child, because Us
action, whllo fully effective. Is mild.
AlberU Expects to Establish a New
Industry to Benefit Farmers
It is understood that paper from flax
straw as a new Alberta industry is
making some progress towards real¬
ization and the Provincial Government
I
is continuing Us Invesiigatlon into the
business possibilities of such an en-
terprse. Suificient experimentation
has already been done for tho pres¬
ent, but further details in connection
with gctiiug a possible industry under
way will be gathered from the govern¬
ment by the trade commissioner.
"Jessie, I have told you again and
again not to speak when older persons
aro talking, but wait until they stop."
"i’ve tried that already, mamma.
They never do stop."
Plain English
"Jimmy told ms he stayed under
water for two minutes one day last
summer."
"iteally! It sounds as If be were
amphibious."
"Well, if that's the Greek for liar,
you'vs hit it!**
MInjrd's LIntmsnt for Distemper
Always something sew and fresh in
Groceries and Meats
at Our Store
Never Setl Grain
on a Dull Market
AWorld-wde System
QtFinanoial Sei^ice
IT« DOBB not alwayg pny to tell cmin
M Mon M throabing in finished. If you
hnyt n good ortfp Mid the market is
dsri^riaMd ana tha local manager of the
Standard Bank and arrange a loan
uniil a more favorable aituation preaents
Haalf.
Oor'maaagaris alwaya glad to disoiisa
nnoh problama in oonfldenoe.
Phone 17
STANDARD BANK
JU Y telephone you can talk with your neighbour or
with an individual thousands of miles away. By
telepaph you can span the continent ^ by cable your
message can girdle the earth.
In like manner you can use the service of the
Bank of Montreal in litde or large measure
as the occasion demands.
You can transact business of a purely local nature
Of enter into financial dealings with people in any
part of the world.
like the telephone, tcle^ph or cable, our system
of financial service b as extensive as arc the needs
of our customers.
GALT
COAL
lUYMOm BMNCH—T. L. Halpbit lloiMgsr
Tha alaotion aomp ft on! Very
aoon now wa ahall ba listening to
haranguaa about tha oountry going
lo pot and r^in, followed by a
homa*made election song by six
young ladies from Magrath. The
*'het-up" oandidatee, who found
life quite safe and serene a few
weeks ago, will now show tremen¬
dous aUrm regarding Canada’s
predioamant They will conclude
their argumenta with; "Now,
ladiea and gentlemen, this
AS COAL DEALERS
Wa dot our "ra'* ahd cross our "t'a" —wa pay strict atten*
tioo to dataila.
ThaVa why wa have no troubla writing QUALITY and
SATISFACTION into all iraaaaationa with our onatomara.
i. B. CARD
Phone 90 or 87
IS our
platform, and on it we go before
you on October 29th with the ut¬
most oonfldsnoe of the ultimate re-
soli"
Established over lOO years
Ibtal Assets in excess of i7oo.oap«ooo
"MissCherry Rlossoiiie", a pop
ular opera will bo stagocl in thi
neiir future by local talent. Re
hearsals will coiumence shortly.
UlloriB,. a. opM>ii>« i. «.hed. J
uel morrow. promises to be a highly impor-
Mr. Workman, school Uaoher at
Welling WM a visitor ^ra last •nterUlnment and interest. The
Tueadav on those two days will be the
* aoena of danoing, fbh ponds and
Sis ladies and elevan men ware booths o f various descriptions
in attandanoa at tha tha kxjal lib* Tha first afUmoon will also see the
eral meeting last Monday. Tha serving of a dinner such as will be
home drama is approaching and
the first ward is already laying
plans for their first play of the
season. This wiH probably be u!i-
der the direction of liee Brewerton
whoee splendid work in numerous
past shows is well remembered.
White
Sidewalks along Broadway are
now completed much to the grati¬
fication of the citizens.
Fresh for Tomorrow
(Saturday)
MeeYs race horses, Mack John¬
son, Silent Weapon and Silent
Pardner have been running in the
money frequently at the Winnipeg
races. Silent Pardner, created a
sensation when he nosed liut some
Two local youths, engaging in
fistic altercations with the Orient¬
als of the Utah Cafe were fined
9200 ami costs, and 925 a^id costs
upon pleading guilty last Wednss*
SUGAR CITY MEAT CO
e Uominion. ’ day
rvice and Quality
W. S. Rousa and Mrs. L L Pack
with R. A. Van Orman, and Chaa
McCarthy a% alternate^ South
Raymond delagataa wata J. D.
(Doatley and J. D. -Brown with Mra
J. D. Coatley as altamata.
Britain Celebratca Hundred Years of Railroading
FOR 8ALB—Several doaen heavy
galvanized double Bre^ Paaa'
At a bargain. Take as many as
you need. Wholeeale price 40o,
going at 25a Come early. Maple
Leaf Bakery.
Galt Lump and Stove Coal
Ellison Milling Co
Raymond
Wm. Clemis, Agent
Office at Elevator, Pboot t
Beet Growers*-! would cctiaider
a contract to haul beets by the ton.
R A. Lewis, care of P. K. More¬
land, Phone R303, New Dayton. Z
DR. H. HARCPURT RIAL
DENTAL SURGEON
Ladies Beauty
Parlor
Mias Blanche VanOrman
in charge
Marcel ..T5c
Rcfet_50c
FOR SALE—Studsbaker Car,
in good running order. Snap.—
Apply Knight dc Meldrum Garage
Raymond. t
Will be in his office in Raymond
Monday, Thursday, Friday and
Saturday of each week.
In Magrath Tuesday and Wed¬
nesday, of each week.
Office hours:
0 to 18 1.80 to 6
FOR SALE — Two purebred
Hampebire bucks, 3 years old.—
Also a few young Piga—^
O. Dahle, phone R220, Raymond. 8
UNITED CHURCH Servioes—
Sunday at 7:30 p. m. Everybody
welcome.
Three Barbers
Two Baths
Shoe Shine Stand
Quick Service
FOR SALE or Trade—A new
set of Harness, for oalvge or piga
Alee a Shanty, in good condition.
Apply H. P. Sohneidnr, Raymond.
DANCE ^Opera House tomor-
row night Saturday. Everybody
welcome.
FOR SALE^Three room rest*
denoe, to be moved from (ot loca¬
ted one blook east of Broadway.—
Apply to Don Wall, Raymond. 8
C. RABY
THOS. OTT
wn STOCK oMum
Will buy any quantity any time at
highest market prioee
Pb<«e or wire at my expense
rfiTnttn’r flrM •nsiiie •• the SUekUn a Uftrllnctea Kallwai'n. lnMrt-~Th« Interior of the oboervation ear
Faelflc Tra»»'Cana 4 a. Lawar—The Traaa-CanaSa laavinc Uantreai.
on snd Dsrlinfton Railway, in Enga agonies our-grandparenls had to endure if they wished
tatter of history now. Its board of to go from one place to another by train. The Duke
nore; its inventor has passed to his ana Duchess of York attended the celebrations and,
ig stock, or what survives of it, rests watching the parades, became thoroughly infected with
urns—having served its day and bepn the spirit of the occasion. All those who took part
march of progresa. in the processions, and some of those who didn't,
—a esntury since the time when the dressed in the costumes of the period, giving to the
Arlington Railway was regarded as a celebrations an atmosphere altogether in keemng with
nsenng achievement and threatened the nature of the celebration.
f the stage coach ae a means of long- By way of showing the wonderful development
ortation—the ancient engines have that has* taken place In i;|iilroadiiig since the first
from their pedestals, the wheels oiled, engine painfully puffed its way from Darlington to
i and once again high hatted gentle- Stockton there it shown above one of the engines
;ed maidens have been bumped along used in the centenary celebrations pulling a replica
to Darlington behind 4he first reiu of the original train contrasted with the uitre-modern
and ever nad Trans-Canada, the all-steel Canadian Pacific Train,
ople of Great Britain celebrated its which nowadays conveys its passengers from one part
rys Processioiu af defunct ruHing of the Dominion to another, three thousand miles
g stock that is almost defunct illus- away, at a speed considered unattainable by our
Don’t negUot tho first symptoms
of “eye trouble."
Proorastlnstion meene more eer*
iouB trouble m time goes oi^ Good
eyeeight mesns too muo^ to you
to tnke sny ohinoee of permuneat
disability.
“Prevention is Better then Cum."
50 Cents
SmiT rOR A WART AD
is KRARLT ALWAYS A
fATlXO PRorosinoN.
Phone 2832, Lethbridge, Alberts
A dd r ess: 1004, 0th Ave. S.
The Recorder
$ 2.00
Per Year
J. M. HENDERSON
OPTOMETRIST, OPTICIAN
/
14 years at Wright's Jewelry Store
/ * liOtlibrklge